300 black-billed gulls nest among the concrete pillars of a building damaged in the Christchurch earthquake – but the colony is annoying some locals

When the world’s rarest gull started nesting in the bowels of an earthquake-damaged building in central Christchurch, it was hailed as a sign of the city’s rebirth after the 2011 disaster.

Some 300 black-billed gulls – a critically endangered species endemic to New Zealand – have been nesting in a half-demolished office block on Armagh Street in central Christchurch since November 2019, surprising conservationists and delighting local birders.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Record 3.7m workers in England will have major illness by 2040, study finds

Health Foundation report also predicts people in poorest areas will be three…

Ryder Cup: USA lead Europe 11-5 before singles on final day – live!

Live Ryder Cup updates from 5pm BST Petulant Koepka causes storm as…

The Guardian view on Maeve Gilmore’s art: out from the shadows | Editorial

Cliches about the toll of domesticity on creativity undermine the achievements of…

‘It’s been in my mum’s attic’: iconic GB London 2012 kit set for charity auction

Fencer Laurence Halsted is selling his kit to help young athletes BOA…