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The Little Gull is a rare resident in North America, with most breeding records coming from Ontario or the Hudson Bay lowlands and the non-breeding distribution extending from the Great lakes to the Gulf of Mexico (Ewins and Weseloh 1999). Breeding records indicate that Little Gulls bred in southern Ontario from 1962 to 1989 but are not known to have done so since. A few pairs breed sporadically along the coast of Hudson Bay. The disappearance of breeders from Ontario suggests a decrease in the Canadian population since 1970. However, the species’ remote and scattered breeding locations make the national trend difficult to determine and the reliability of this assessment is considered low. This species has been identified as a priority for conservation and/or stewardship in one or more Bird Conservation Region Strategies in Canada.
When the species was breeding at Oshawa Second Marsh, in Ontario, the breeding sites were protected. Subsequent breeding sites around Hudson Bay have not been within protected areas. Little is known of the species' ecology in North America outside the breeding season, but it seems likely that the same causes of mortality affecting other small gulls would affect Little Gulls (e.g., mammalian predators, falcons, pollution and botulism poisoning; Pollet et al. 2012).
Environment and Climate Change Canada and partners have developed Bird Conservation Region Strategies in each of Canada’s Bird Conservation Regions (BCRs). In these strategies, selected species are identified as priorities for one or more of the following reasons:
Select any of the sub-regions below to view the BCR strategy for additional details.