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Fulmar - Wikipedia The northern fulmar (Fulmarus glacialis) or just fulmar lives in the North Atlantic and North Pacific, whereas the southern fulmar (Fulmarus glacialoides) is, as its name implies, a bird of the Southern Oceans These birds look superficially like gulls, but are not closely related, but are petrels
Northern Fulmar Overview, All About Birds, Cornell Lab of Ornithology The gray-and-white Northern Fulmar looks like a gull, but its stiff-winged flight and swift glides, not to mention the nostril tubes on its bill, mark it as a relative of petrels and albatrosses These stout-bodied seabirds are abundant in the bitterly cold northern Atlantic, Pacific, and Arctic Oceans, where they feed over deep waters
Northern Fulmar | Audubon Field Guide Patterned somewhat like a gull but very different in flight behavior, the fulmar flies fast with quick wingbeats and stiff-winged glides, wheeling effortlessly in strong winds, often swinging up in high arcs over the waves
Fulmar Bird Facts (Fulmarus glacialis) | Birdfact The Fulmar is a robust seabird with a stocky body and thick neck Its plumage is predominantly grey above and white below, with a pale blue-grey tinge on the wings
Fulmar | Seabird, Oceanic, Petrel | Britannica fulmar, any of several species of gull-like oceanic birds of the family Procellariidae (order Procellariiformes), which also includes the petrels and the shearwaters The name fulmar refers especially to the two species of the genus Fulmarus
Fulmar Facts: Identification, Diet, Migration Info etc. - Binocular Base A young Fulmar spends about 4-5 years at sea before it starts breeding They lay their eggs directly on the bare rock or in shallow depressions Fulmars can desalinate their bodies, thanks to a special gland They are known to live exceptionally long lives for birds, with some reaching over 40 years old
Fulmar | BTO The last 250 years have seen a remarkable expansion in Fulmar populations and the colonisation of suitable sites around Iceland, Britain, Ireland, northwest France and sections of the Norwegian coast
Northern Fulmar - eBird Stocky, medium-sized seabird like a mix between a shearwater and a gull Variable plumage Light morph birds are white below and gray above like a gull Dark morphs are generally sooty-gray overall, darker and browner in the Pacific All but the darkest birds have a pale patch on the upperwing Also note thick pale bill with orange tip Flies with stiff wingbeats, often wheeling and arcing
Northern Fulmar - Fulmarus glacialis - Birds of the World The Northern Fulmar, a "tube-nosed" bird related to petrels and shearwaters, is abundant in Alaska and the Canadian Arctic, though few people ever see the species on land in those regions because it tends to be highly aggregated in a few remote breeding places
Northern fulmar - Wikipedia The northern fulmar, Arctic fulmar, [2] or simply fulmar[3] (Fulmarus glacialis), is an abundant seabird found primarily in subarctic regions of the North Atlantic and North Pacific oceans