People

Celebrities and Royals from around the world. Right on schedule.

News

Daily news and events, covered by our international photographers.

Features

Odd, funny and touchy images. Be amazed.

Styling

Fashion and design trends.

Portrait

Premium Portraiture.

Reportage

In-depth Coverage.

Creative

Selected stock imagery.

Dukas Bildagentur
request@dukas.ch
+41 44 298 50 00

Your search:

96 result(s) in 0.07 s

  • FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    DUK10029720_002
    FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Will Nicholls/REX/Shutterstock (5736305a)
    Puffin
    Puffin has eels stolen by gull, Farne Islands, Northumberland, UK - 21 Jun 2016
    This is the moment a black-backed gull showed that it was no bird brain - by stealing a puffin's dinner! Rather than go through the tough work of catching its own food the sneaky gull simply waited for the puffin to catch its fill before pouncing. The moment was caught on camera on the Farne Islands by photographer Will Nicholls. He says: "The Farne Islands is a paradise for seabirds and I have visited every year for 7 years. Occasionally, you'll see a gull swoop down and chase a puffin into its burrow that has returned with a beak full of fish to feed its young. Sometimes, the gulls manage to steal the fish from the puffin, something known as kleptoparasitism. I spotted a commotion on the island, with a lesser black-backed gull running along at full speed after a panicked puffin, searching for its burrow for safety. In seconds, the gull pinned down the puffin and snatched the sand eels straight from the puffin. The Puffin was totally unharmed, perhaps just with his pride knocked a little".
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    DUK10029720_007
    FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Will Nicholls/REX/Shutterstock (5736305e)
    A puffin is attacked by a black-backed gull
    Puffin has eels stolen by gull, Farne Islands, Northumberland, UK - 21 Jun 2016
    This is the moment a black-backed gull showed that it was no bird brain - by stealing a puffin's dinner! Rather than go through the tough work of catching its own food the sneaky gull simply waited for the puffin to catch its fill before pouncing. The moment was caught on camera on the Farne Islands by photographer Will Nicholls. He says: "The Farne Islands is a paradise for seabirds and I have visited every year for 7 years. Occasionally, you'll see a gull swoop down and chase a puffin into its burrow that has returned with a beak full of fish to feed its young. Sometimes, the gulls manage to steal the fish from the puffin, something known as kleptoparasitism. I spotted a commotion on the island, with a lesser black-backed gull running along at full speed after a panicked puffin, searching for its burrow for safety. In seconds, the gull pinned down the puffin and snatched the sand eels straight from the puffin. The Puffin was totally unharmed, perhaps just with his pride knocked a little".
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    DUK10029720_006
    FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Will Nicholls/REX/Shutterstock (5736305b)
    A puffin is attacked by a black-backed gull
    Puffin has eels stolen by gull, Farne Islands, Northumberland, UK - 21 Jun 2016
    This is the moment a black-backed gull showed that it was no bird brain - by stealing a puffin's dinner! Rather than go through the tough work of catching its own food the sneaky gull simply waited for the puffin to catch its fill before pouncing. The moment was caught on camera on the Farne Islands by photographer Will Nicholls. He says: "The Farne Islands is a paradise for seabirds and I have visited every year for 7 years. Occasionally, you'll see a gull swoop down and chase a puffin into its burrow that has returned with a beak full of fish to feed its young. Sometimes, the gulls manage to steal the fish from the puffin, something known as kleptoparasitism. I spotted a commotion on the island, with a lesser black-backed gull running along at full speed after a panicked puffin, searching for its burrow for safety. In seconds, the gull pinned down the puffin and snatched the sand eels straight from the puffin. The Puffin was totally unharmed, perhaps just with his pride knocked a little".
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    DUK10029720_008
    FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Will Nicholls/REX/Shutterstock (5736305g)
    A puffin is attacked by a black-backed gull
    Puffin has eels stolen by gull, Farne Islands, Northumberland, UK - 21 Jun 2016
    This is the moment a black-backed gull showed that it was no bird brain - by stealing a puffin's dinner! Rather than go through the tough work of catching its own food the sneaky gull simply waited for the puffin to catch its fill before pouncing. The moment was caught on camera on the Farne Islands by photographer Will Nicholls. He says: "The Farne Islands is a paradise for seabirds and I have visited every year for 7 years. Occasionally, you'll see a gull swoop down and chase a puffin into its burrow that has returned with a beak full of fish to feed its young. Sometimes, the gulls manage to steal the fish from the puffin, something known as kleptoparasitism. I spotted a commotion on the island, with a lesser black-backed gull running along at full speed after a panicked puffin, searching for its burrow for safety. In seconds, the gull pinned down the puffin and snatched the sand eels straight from the puffin. The Puffin was totally unharmed, perhaps just with his pride knocked a little".
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    DUK10029720_009
    FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Will Nicholls/REX/Shutterstock (5736305i)
    Puffin
    Puffin has eels stolen by gull, Farne Islands, Northumberland, UK - 21 Jun 2016
    This is the moment a black-backed gull showed that it was no bird brain - by stealing a puffin's dinner! Rather than go through the tough work of catching its own food the sneaky gull simply waited for the puffin to catch its fill before pouncing. The moment was caught on camera on the Farne Islands by photographer Will Nicholls. He says: "The Farne Islands is a paradise for seabirds and I have visited every year for 7 years. Occasionally, you'll see a gull swoop down and chase a puffin into its burrow that has returned with a beak full of fish to feed its young. Sometimes, the gulls manage to steal the fish from the puffin, something known as kleptoparasitism. I spotted a commotion on the island, with a lesser black-backed gull running along at full speed after a panicked puffin, searching for its burrow for safety. In seconds, the gull pinned down the puffin and snatched the sand eels straight from the puffin. The Puffin was totally unharmed, perhaps just with his pride knocked a little".
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    DUK10029720_003
    FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Will Nicholls/REX/Shutterstock (5736305h)
    Puffins
    Puffin has eels stolen by gull, Farne Islands, Northumberland, UK - 21 Jun 2016
    This is the moment a black-backed gull showed that it was no bird brain - by stealing a puffin's dinner! Rather than go through the tough work of catching its own food the sneaky gull simply waited for the puffin to catch its fill before pouncing. The moment was caught on camera on the Farne Islands by photographer Will Nicholls. He says: "The Farne Islands is a paradise for seabirds and I have visited every year for 7 years. Occasionally, you'll see a gull swoop down and chase a puffin into its burrow that has returned with a beak full of fish to feed its young. Sometimes, the gulls manage to steal the fish from the puffin, something known as kleptoparasitism. I spotted a commotion on the island, with a lesser black-backed gull running along at full speed after a panicked puffin, searching for its burrow for safety. In seconds, the gull pinned down the puffin and snatched the sand eels straight from the puffin. The Puffin was totally unharmed, perhaps just with his pride knocked a little".
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    DUK10029720_001
    FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Will Nicholls/REX/Shutterstock (5736305f)
    Puffin with sand eels in beak
    Puffin has eels stolen by gull, Farne Islands, Northumberland, UK - 21 Jun 2016
    This is the moment a black-backed gull showed that it was no bird brain - by stealing a puffin's dinner! Rather than go through the tough work of catching its own food the sneaky gull simply waited for the puffin to catch its fill before pouncing. The moment was caught on camera on the Farne Islands by photographer Will Nicholls. He says: "The Farne Islands is a paradise for seabirds and I have visited every year for 7 years. Occasionally, you'll see a gull swoop down and chase a puffin into its burrow that has returned with a beak full of fish to feed its young. Sometimes, the gulls manage to steal the fish from the puffin, something known as kleptoparasitism. I spotted a commotion on the island, with a lesser black-backed gull running along at full speed after a panicked puffin, searching for its burrow for safety. In seconds, the gull pinned down the puffin and snatched the sand eels straight from the puffin. The Puffin was totally unharmed, perhaps just with his pride knocked a little".
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    DUK10029720_004
    FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Will Nicholls/REX/Shutterstock (5736305d)
    Puffin with sand eels in beak
    Puffin has eels stolen by gull, Farne Islands, Northumberland, UK - 21 Jun 2016
    This is the moment a black-backed gull showed that it was no bird brain - by stealing a puffin's dinner! Rather than go through the tough work of catching its own food the sneaky gull simply waited for the puffin to catch its fill before pouncing. The moment was caught on camera on the Farne Islands by photographer Will Nicholls. He says: "The Farne Islands is a paradise for seabirds and I have visited every year for 7 years. Occasionally, you'll see a gull swoop down and chase a puffin into its burrow that has returned with a beak full of fish to feed its young. Sometimes, the gulls manage to steal the fish from the puffin, something known as kleptoparasitism. I spotted a commotion on the island, with a lesser black-backed gull running along at full speed after a panicked puffin, searching for its burrow for safety. In seconds, the gull pinned down the puffin and snatched the sand eels straight from the puffin. The Puffin was totally unharmed, perhaps just with his pride knocked a little".
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    DUK10029720_005
    FEATURE - Puffin hat sein Mittagessen von einer Moewe gestohlen
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Will Nicholls/REX/Shutterstock (5736305c)
    Puffin with sand eels in beak
    Puffin has eels stolen by gull, Farne Islands, Northumberland, UK - 21 Jun 2016
    This is the moment a black-backed gull showed that it was no bird brain - by stealing a puffin's dinner! Rather than go through the tough work of catching its own food the sneaky gull simply waited for the puffin to catch its fill before pouncing. The moment was caught on camera on the Farne Islands by photographer Will Nicholls. He says: "The Farne Islands is a paradise for seabirds and I have visited every year for 7 years. Occasionally, you'll see a gull swoop down and chase a puffin into its burrow that has returned with a beak full of fish to feed its young. Sometimes, the gulls manage to steal the fish from the puffin, something known as kleptoparasitism. I spotted a commotion on the island, with a lesser black-backed gull running along at full speed after a panicked puffin, searching for its burrow for safety. In seconds, the gull pinned down the puffin and snatched the sand eels straight from the puffin. The Puffin was totally unharmed, perhaps just with his pride knocked a little".
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Silbermöwe fängt ein Blässhuhn Küken in einem Londoner Park
    DUK10028686_003
    FEATURE - Silbermöwe fängt ein Blässhuhn Küken in einem Londoner Park
    CREDIT: Ed Brown/Rex Shutterstock. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ed Brown/REX/Shutterstock (5732935f)
    Herring gull swallows coot chick
    Herring gull captures coot chick, St.James Park, London, UK - 14 Jun 2016
    Call it the circle of life, but it's still pretty icky.

    Wildlife photographer Ed Brown captured the fate of an unfortunate coot chick who caught the eye of a hungry herring gull in a London park on Tuesday (14 June).

    He says: "I was sitting on one of the benches in St James Park watching all the wildlife on the lake when a group of coots started making warning calls. I looked round and saw this herring gull had taken one of the chicks, predictably, it was now being harassed by the adult coots and flew off towards the middle of the lake carrying the chick (chick was dead by this point) It tried to swallow it down while on the lake but actually looked to be too big, it was then it carried the chick back to land where it finally managed to eat it. I have to say that its pretty grim to watch but I also realise its the circle of life, the Gull needs to eat too."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Silbermöwe fängt ein Blässhuhn Küken in einem Londoner Park
    DUK10028686_004
    FEATURE - Silbermöwe fängt ein Blässhuhn Küken in einem Londoner Park
    CREDIT: Ed Brown/Rex Shutterstock. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ed Brown/REX/Shutterstock (5732935c)
    Herring gull captures coot chick
    Herring gull captures coot chick, St.James Park, London, UK - 14 Jun 2016
    Call it the circle of life, but it's still pretty icky.

    Wildlife photographer Ed Brown captured the fate of an unfortunate coot chick who caught the eye of a hungry herring gull in a London park on Tuesday (14 June).

    He says: "I was sitting on one of the benches in St James Park watching all the wildlife on the lake when a group of coots started making warning calls. I looked round and saw this herring gull had taken one of the chicks, predictably, it was now being harassed by the adult coots and flew off towards the middle of the lake carrying the chick (chick was dead by this point) It tried to swallow it down while on the lake but actually looked to be too big, it was then it carried the chick back to land where it finally managed to eat it. I have to say that its pretty grim to watch but I also realise its the circle of life, the Gull needs to eat too."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    DUKAS_191086177_NUR
    Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    An American Herring Gull hunts for fish during the morning hours at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on November 14, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    DUKAS_191086176_NUR
    Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    An American Herring Gull hunts for fish during the morning hours at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on November 14, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    DUKAS_191086175_NUR
    Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    An American Herring Gull hunts for fish during the morning hours at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on November 14, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    DUKAS_191086174_NUR
    Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    An American Herring Gull hunts for fish during the morning hours at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on November 14, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    DUKAS_191086173_NUR
    Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    An American Herring Gull hunts for fish during the morning hours at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on November 14, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    DUKAS_191086172_NUR
    Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    An American Herring Gull hunts for fish during the morning hours at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on November 14, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    DUKAS_191086171_NUR
    Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    An American Herring Gull hunts for fish during the morning hours at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on November 14, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    DUKAS_191086170_NUR
    Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    An American Herring Gull hunts for fish during the morning hours at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on November 14, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    DUKAS_191086169_NUR
    Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    An American Herring Gull hunts for fish during the morning hours at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on November 14, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    DUKAS_191086166_NUR
    Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    An American Herring Gull hunts for fish during the morning hours at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on November 14, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    DUKAS_191086154_NUR
    Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    An American Herring Gull hunts for fish during the morning hours at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on November 14, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    DUKAS_191086152_NUR
    Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Indiana
    An American Herring Gull hunts for fish during the morning hours at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on November 14, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    DUKAS_190701196_NUR
    Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    The Stranded Migratory Birds Seen At Bagmati River In Kathmandu Nepal, November 3, 2025. These Flocks Are Moving Down From The Frozen Lakes And Wetlands Of Southern Russia, Mongolia, And The Tibetan Plateau, Crossing Mountain Corridors Into Nepal. (Photo by Sunil Pradhan/NurPhoto)

     

  • Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    DUKAS_190701048_NUR
    Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    The Stranded Migratory Birds Seen At Bagmati River In Kathmandu Nepal, November 3, 2025. These Flocks Are Moving Down From The Frozen Lakes And Wetlands Of Southern Russia, Mongolia, And The Tibetan Plateau, Crossing Mountain Corridors Into Nepal. (Photo by Sunil Pradhan/NurPhoto)

     

  • Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    DUKAS_190701047_NUR
    Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    The Stranded Migratory Birds Seen At Bagmati River In Kathmandu Nepal, November 3, 2025. These Flocks Are Moving Down From The Frozen Lakes And Wetlands Of Southern Russia, Mongolia, And The Tibetan Plateau, Crossing Mountain Corridors Into Nepal. (Photo by Sunil Pradhan/NurPhoto)

     

  • Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    DUKAS_190701046_NUR
    Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    The Stranded Migratory Birds Seen At Bagmati River In Kathmandu Nepal, November 3, 2025. These Flocks Are Moving Down From The Frozen Lakes And Wetlands Of Southern Russia, Mongolia, And The Tibetan Plateau, Crossing Mountain Corridors Into Nepal. (Photo by Sunil Pradhan/NurPhoto)

     

  • Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    DUKAS_190701044_NUR
    Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    The Stranded Migratory Birds Seen At Bagmati River In Kathmandu Nepal, November 3, 2025. These Flocks Are Moving Down From The Frozen Lakes And Wetlands Of Southern Russia, Mongolia, And The Tibetan Plateau, Crossing Mountain Corridors Into Nepal. (Photo by Sunil Pradhan/NurPhoto)

     

  • Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    DUKAS_190701043_NUR
    Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    The Stranded Migratory Birds Seen At Bagmati River In Kathmandu Nepal, November 3, 2025. These Flocks Are Moving Down From The Frozen Lakes And Wetlands Of Southern Russia, Mongolia, And The Tibetan Plateau, Crossing Mountain Corridors Into Nepal. (Photo by Sunil Pradhan/NurPhoto)

     

  • Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    DUKAS_190701042_NUR
    Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    The Stranded Migratory Birds Seen At Bagmati River In Kathmandu Nepal, November 3, 2025. These Flocks Are Moving Down From The Frozen Lakes And Wetlands Of Southern Russia, Mongolia, And The Tibetan Plateau, Crossing Mountain Corridors Into Nepal. (Photo by Sunil Pradhan/NurPhoto)

     

  • Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    DUKAS_190701040_NUR
    Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    The Stranded Migratory Birds Seen At Bagmati River In Kathmandu Nepal, November 3, 2025. These Flocks Are Moving Down From The Frozen Lakes And Wetlands Of Southern Russia, Mongolia, And The Tibetan Plateau, Crossing Mountain Corridors Into Nepal. (Photo by Sunil Pradhan/NurPhoto)

     

  • Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    DUKAS_190701039_NUR
    Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    The Stranded Migratory Birds Seen At Bagmati River In Kathmandu Nepal, November 3, 2025. These Flocks Are Moving Down From The Frozen Lakes And Wetlands Of Southern Russia, Mongolia, And The Tibetan Plateau, Crossing Mountain Corridors Into Nepal. (Photo by Sunil Pradhan/NurPhoto)

     

  • Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    DUKAS_190701038_NUR
    Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    The Stranded Migratory Birds Seen At Bagmati River In Kathmandu Nepal, November 3, 2025. These Flocks Are Moving Down From The Frozen Lakes And Wetlands Of Southern Russia, Mongolia, And The Tibetan Plateau, Crossing Mountain Corridors Into Nepal. (Photo by Sunil Pradhan/NurPhoto)

     

  • Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    DUKAS_190701037_NUR
    Black-headed Gull Seen In Kathmandu, Nepal
    The Stranded Migratory Birds Seen At Bagmati River In Kathmandu Nepal, November 3, 2025. These Flocks Are Moving Down From The Frozen Lakes And Wetlands Of Southern Russia, Mongolia, And The Tibetan Plateau, Crossing Mountain Corridors Into Nepal. (Photo by Sunil Pradhan/NurPhoto)

     

  • Gull bird poop plugs new seaside IKEA store
    DUKAS_187803562_FER
    Gull bird poop plugs new seaside IKEA store
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Gulls 1
    Ref 17082
    15/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: IKEA
    Self-build furniture chain IKEA has opened a new stone in a UK seaside town plague by seagulls — and is advertising some of its stock with bird poop on it.
    The new store in the trendy resort of Brighton on England’s south coast
    The items advertised with a splodge of gull poop are the Poang armchair, Mammut child’s stool and the Helmer drawer unit.
    The campaign was devised with UK advertising agency Mother.
    A spokesman said: “Step out your front door, sit on a bench or look out your car window, there are presents left for you everywhere.
    “It’s just part of life that every Brighton local deals with.”
    In addition tIKEA also opened a kiosk giving free fries to locals to try to make up for all the meals disrupted by the city’s flying troublemakers over the years.
    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Gull bird poop plugs new seaside IKEA store
    DUKAS_187803561_FER
    Gull bird poop plugs new seaside IKEA store
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Gulls 1
    Ref 17082
    15/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: IKEA
    Self-build furniture chain IKEA has opened a new stone in a UK seaside town plague by seagulls — and is advertising some of its stock with bird poop on it.
    The new store in the trendy resort of Brighton on England’s south coast
    The items advertised with a splodge of gull poop are the Poang armchair, Mammut child’s stool and the Helmer drawer unit.
    The campaign was devised with UK advertising agency Mother.
    A spokesman said: “Step out your front door, sit on a bench or look out your car window, there are presents left for you everywhere.
    “It’s just part of life that every Brighton local deals with.”
    In addition tIKEA also opened a kiosk giving free fries to locals to try to make up for all the meals disrupted by the city’s flying troublemakers over the years.
    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Gull bird poop plugs new seaside IKEA store
    DUKAS_187803558_FER
    Gull bird poop plugs new seaside IKEA store
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Gulls 1
    Ref 17082
    15/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: IKEA
    Self-build furniture chain IKEA has opened a new stone in a UK seaside town plague by seagulls — and is advertising some of its stock with bird poop on it.
    The new store in the trendy resort of Brighton on England’s south coast
    The items advertised with a splodge of gull poop are the Poang armchair, Mammut child’s stool and the Helmer drawer unit.
    The campaign was devised with UK advertising agency Mother.
    A spokesman said: “Step out your front door, sit on a bench or look out your car window, there are presents left for you everywhere.
    “It’s just part of life that every Brighton local deals with.”
    In addition tIKEA also opened a kiosk giving free fries to locals to try to make up for all the meals disrupted by the city’s flying troublemakers over the years.
    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • 'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    DUKAS_159716863_EYE
    'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    Urban gulls are often treated as nuisances but humans could learn a lot from the screeching snack-snatchers.

    Many people complain about the menace of urban gulls, but with the wild populations of some species in severe decline, our parks and high streets are increasingly the only places where gulls are thriving.

    One of the UK's leading urban gull experts, Peter Rock, is the man to ask. He has been attaching identification colour-rings to gull nestlings in Bristol, Bath, Cardiff, Gloucester and other towns and cities since 1980.

    Gulls haven't always occupied towns and cities to the extent they do today. A decisive event was the passing of the Clean Air Act in 1956, which forbade the burning of rubbish, resulting in increased amounts of waste food being buried in landfill. "People complain about urban gulls, but they're here at our invitation," Rock says. "My role, as I see it, is to discover who these birds really are and provide that information to all."

    Herring gulls now on Red List of threatened birds with lesser black-back gulls (pictured) on the Amber List following significant decline (11 Jul 2023).

    © Adrian Sherratt / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    DUKAS_159716865_EYE
    'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    Urban gulls are often treated as nuisances but humans could learn a lot from the screeching snack-snatchers.

    Many people complain about the menace of urban gulls, but with the wild populations of some species in severe decline, our parks and high streets are increasingly the only places where gulls are thriving.

    One of the UK's leading urban gull experts, Peter Rock, is the man to ask. He has been attaching identification colour-rings to gull nestlings in Bristol, Bath, Cardiff, Gloucester and other towns and cities since 1980.

    Gulls haven't always occupied towns and cities to the extent they do today. A decisive event was the passing of the Clean Air Act in 1956, which forbade the burning of rubbish, resulting in increased amounts of waste food being buried in landfill. "People complain about urban gulls, but they're here at our invitation," Rock says. "My role, as I see it, is to discover who these birds really are and provide that information to all."

    Herring gulls now on Red List of threatened birds with lesser black-back gulls on the Amber List following significant decline (11 Jul 2023).
    - Lesser black-back gull nestlings.

    © Adrian Sherratt / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    DUKAS_159716882_EYE
    'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    Urban gulls are often treated as nuisances but humans could learn a lot from the screeching snack-snatchers.

    Many people complain about the menace of urban gulls, but with the wild populations of some species in severe decline, our parks and high streets are increasingly the only places where gulls are thriving.

    One of the UK's leading urban gull experts, Peter Rock, is the man to ask. He has been attaching identification colour-rings to gull nestlings in Bristol, Bath, Cardiff, Gloucester and other towns and cities since 1980.

    Gulls haven't always occupied towns and cities to the extent they do today. A decisive event was the passing of the Clean Air Act in 1956, which forbade the burning of rubbish, resulting in increased amounts of waste food being buried in landfill. "People complain about urban gulls, but they're here at our invitation," Rock says. "My role, as I see it, is to discover who these birds really are and provide that information to all."

    Herring gulls now on Red List of threatened birds with lesser black-back gulls (pictured) on the Amber List following significant decline (11 Jul 2023).

    © Adrian Sherratt / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    DUKAS_159716858_EYE
    'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    Urban gulls are often treated as nuisances but humans could learn a lot from the screeching snack-snatchers.

    Many people complain about the menace of urban gulls, but with the wild populations of some species in severe decline, our parks and high streets are increasingly the only places where gulls are thriving.

    One of the UK's leading urban gull experts, Peter Rock, is the man to ask. He has been attaching identification colour-rings to gull nestlings in Bristol, Bath, Cardiff, Gloucester and other towns and cities since 1980.

    Gulls haven't always occupied towns and cities to the extent they do today. A decisive event was the passing of the Clean Air Act in 1956, which forbade the burning of rubbish, resulting in increased amounts of waste food being buried in landfill. "People complain about urban gulls, but they're here at our invitation," Rock says. "My role, as I see it, is to discover who these birds really are and provide that information to all."

    Herring gulls now on Red List of threatened birds with lesser black-back gulls (pictured) on the Amber List following significant decline (11 Jul 2023).

    © Adrian Sherratt / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    DUKAS_159716856_EYE
    'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    Urban gulls are often treated as nuisances but humans could learn a lot from the screeching snack-snatchers.

    Many people complain about the menace of urban gulls, but with the wild populations of some species in severe decline, our parks and high streets are increasingly the only places where gulls are thriving.

    One of the UK's leading urban gull experts, Peter Rock, is the man to ask. He has been attaching identification colour-rings to gull nestlings in Bristol, Bath, Cardiff, Gloucester and other towns and cities since 1980.

    Gulls haven't always occupied towns and cities to the extent they do today. A decisive event was the passing of the Clean Air Act in 1956, which forbade the burning of rubbish, resulting in increased amounts of waste food being buried in landfill. "People complain about urban gulls, but they're here at our invitation," Rock says. "My role, as I see it, is to discover who these birds really are and provide that information to all."

    Herring gulls now on Red List of threatened birds with lesser black-back gulls on the Amber List following significant decline (11 Jul 2023).
    - Gull expert Peter Rock ringing lesser black-back gull nestlings on a roof in Bristol.

    © Adrian Sherratt / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    DUKAS_159716883_EYE
    'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    Urban gulls are often treated as nuisances but humans could learn a lot from the screeching snack-snatchers.

    Many people complain about the menace of urban gulls, but with the wild populations of some species in severe decline, our parks and high streets are increasingly the only places where gulls are thriving.

    One of the UK's leading urban gull experts, Peter Rock, is the man to ask. He has been attaching identification colour-rings to gull nestlings in Bristol, Bath, Cardiff, Gloucester and other towns and cities since 1980.

    Gulls haven't always occupied towns and cities to the extent they do today. A decisive event was the passing of the Clean Air Act in 1956, which forbade the burning of rubbish, resulting in increased amounts of waste food being buried in landfill. "People complain about urban gulls, but they're here at our invitation," Rock says. "My role, as I see it, is to discover who these birds really are and provide that information to all."

    Herring gulls now on Red List of threatened birds with lesser black-back gulls on the Amber List following significant decline (11 Jul 2023).
    - Gull expert Peter Rock ringing lesser black-back gull nestlings on a roof in Bristol.

    © Adrian Sherratt / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    DUKAS_159716857_EYE
    'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    Urban gulls are often treated as nuisances but humans could learn a lot from the screeching snack-snatchers.

    Many people complain about the menace of urban gulls, but with the wild populations of some species in severe decline, our parks and high streets are increasingly the only places where gulls are thriving.

    One of the UK's leading urban gull experts, Peter Rock, is the man to ask. He has been attaching identification colour-rings to gull nestlings in Bristol, Bath, Cardiff, Gloucester and other towns and cities since 1980.

    Gulls haven't always occupied towns and cities to the extent they do today. A decisive event was the passing of the Clean Air Act in 1956, which forbade the burning of rubbish, resulting in increased amounts of waste food being buried in landfill. "People complain about urban gulls, but they're here at our invitation," Rock says. "My role, as I see it, is to discover who these birds really are and provide that information to all."

    Herring gulls now on Red List of threatened birds with lesser black-back gulls on the Amber List following significant decline (11 Jul 2023).
    - Gull expert Peter Rock ringing lesser black-back gull nestlings on a roof in Bristol.

    © Adrian Sherratt / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    DUKAS_159716855_EYE
    'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    Urban gulls are often treated as nuisances but humans could learn a lot from the screeching snack-snatchers.

    Many people complain about the menace of urban gulls, but with the wild populations of some species in severe decline, our parks and high streets are increasingly the only places where gulls are thriving.

    One of the UK's leading urban gull experts, Peter Rock, is the man to ask. He has been attaching identification colour-rings to gull nestlings in Bristol, Bath, Cardiff, Gloucester and other towns and cities since 1980.

    Gulls haven't always occupied towns and cities to the extent they do today. A decisive event was the passing of the Clean Air Act in 1956, which forbade the burning of rubbish, resulting in increased amounts of waste food being buried in landfill. "People complain about urban gulls, but they're here at our invitation," Rock says. "My role, as I see it, is to discover who these birds really are and provide that information to all."

    Herring gulls now on Red List of threatened birds with lesser black-back gulls (pictured) on the Amber List following significant decline (11 Jul 2023).

    © Adrian Sherratt / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    DUKAS_159716881_EYE
    'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    Urban gulls are often treated as nuisances but humans could learn a lot from the screeching snack-snatchers.

    Many people complain about the menace of urban gulls, but with the wild populations of some species in severe decline, our parks and high streets are increasingly the only places where gulls are thriving.

    One of the UK's leading urban gull experts, Peter Rock, is the man to ask. He has been attaching identification colour-rings to gull nestlings in Bristol, Bath, Cardiff, Gloucester and other towns and cities since 1980.

    Gulls haven't always occupied towns and cities to the extent they do today. A decisive event was the passing of the Clean Air Act in 1956, which forbade the burning of rubbish, resulting in increased amounts of waste food being buried in landfill. "People complain about urban gulls, but they're here at our invitation," Rock says. "My role, as I see it, is to discover who these birds really are and provide that information to all."

    Herring gulls now on Red List of threatened birds with lesser black-back gulls (pictured) on the Amber List following significant decline (11 Jul 2023).

    © Adrian Sherratt / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    DUKAS_159716861_EYE
    'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    Urban gulls are often treated as nuisances but humans could learn a lot from the screeching snack-snatchers.

    Many people complain about the menace of urban gulls, but with the wild populations of some species in severe decline, our parks and high streets are increasingly the only places where gulls are thriving.

    One of the UK's leading urban gull experts, Peter Rock, is the man to ask. He has been attaching identification colour-rings to gull nestlings in Bristol, Bath, Cardiff, Gloucester and other towns and cities since 1980.

    Gulls haven't always occupied towns and cities to the extent they do today. A decisive event was the passing of the Clean Air Act in 1956, which forbade the burning of rubbish, resulting in increased amounts of waste food being buried in landfill. "People complain about urban gulls, but they're here at our invitation," Rock says. "My role, as I see it, is to discover who these birds really are and provide that information to all."

    Herring gulls now on Red List of threatened birds with lesser black-back gulls on the Amber List following significant decline (11 Jul 2023).
    - Gull expert Peter Rock ringing and measuring lesser black-back gull nestlings on a roof in Bristol.

    © Adrian Sherratt / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    DUKAS_159716866_EYE
    'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    Urban gulls are often treated as nuisances but humans could learn a lot from the screeching snack-snatchers.

    Many people complain about the menace of urban gulls, but with the wild populations of some species in severe decline, our parks and high streets are increasingly the only places where gulls are thriving.

    One of the UK's leading urban gull experts, Peter Rock, is the man to ask. He has been attaching identification colour-rings to gull nestlings in Bristol, Bath, Cardiff, Gloucester and other towns and cities since 1980.

    Gulls haven't always occupied towns and cities to the extent they do today. A decisive event was the passing of the Clean Air Act in 1956, which forbade the burning of rubbish, resulting in increased amounts of waste food being buried in landfill. "People complain about urban gulls, but they're here at our invitation," Rock says. "My role, as I see it, is to discover who these birds really are and provide that information to all."

    Herring gulls now on Red List of threatened birds with lesser black-back gulls on the Amber List following significant decline (11 Jul 2023).
    - Gull expert Peter Rock ringing lesser black-back gull nestlings on a roof in Bristol.

    © Adrian Sherratt / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    DUKAS_159716868_EYE
    'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    Urban gulls are often treated as nuisances but humans could learn a lot from the screeching snack-snatchers.

    Many people complain about the menace of urban gulls, but with the wild populations of some species in severe decline, our parks and high streets are increasingly the only places where gulls are thriving.

    One of the UK's leading urban gull experts, Peter Rock, is the man to ask. He has been attaching identification colour-rings to gull nestlings in Bristol, Bath, Cardiff, Gloucester and other towns and cities since 1980.

    Gulls haven't always occupied towns and cities to the extent they do today. A decisive event was the passing of the Clean Air Act in 1956, which forbade the burning of rubbish, resulting in increased amounts of waste food being buried in landfill. "People complain about urban gulls, but they're here at our invitation," Rock says. "My role, as I see it, is to discover who these birds really are and provide that information to all."

    Herring gulls now on Red List of threatened birds with lesser black-back gulls on the Amber List following significant decline (11 Jul 2023).
    - Gull expert Peter Rock ringing lesser black-back gull nestlings on a roof in Bristol with Guardian Science Correspondent Linda Geddes.

    © Adrian Sherratt / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    DUKAS_159716854_EYE
    'They're here at our invitation': how gulls took over the UK's cities
    Urban gulls are often treated as nuisances but humans could learn a lot from the screeching snack-snatchers.

    Many people complain about the menace of urban gulls, but with the wild populations of some species in severe decline, our parks and high streets are increasingly the only places where gulls are thriving.

    One of the UK's leading urban gull experts, Peter Rock, is the man to ask. He has been attaching identification colour-rings to gull nestlings in Bristol, Bath, Cardiff, Gloucester and other towns and cities since 1980.

    Gulls haven't always occupied towns and cities to the extent they do today. A decisive event was the passing of the Clean Air Act in 1956, which forbade the burning of rubbish, resulting in increased amounts of waste food being buried in landfill. "People complain about urban gulls, but they're here at our invitation," Rock says. "My role, as I see it, is to discover who these birds really are and provide that information to all."

    Herring gulls now on Red List of threatened birds with lesser black-back gulls on the Amber List following significant decline (11 Jul 2023).
    - Gull expert Peter Rock ringing lesser black-back gull nestlings on a roof in Bristol with Guardian Science Correspondent Linda Geddes.

    © Adrian Sherratt / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Next page