We studied the reproductive biology of Sabine's Gulls (Xema sabini) breedin
g on Southampton Island, in the eastern Canadian Arctic, from May to August
in 1998 and 1999, and compared our results to information collected from t
he same region in 1980. Breeding phenology was 10 days earlier in 1998 than
in these other years, and reflects an earlier onset of snowmelt in that ye
ar. Nests were dispersed, with a density of 7.6 to 8.7 nests per km(2). Sab
ine's Gulls exhibited strong interannual fidelity to breeding sites. Mean c
lutch size was lower in 1999 than 1998, and lower in both these years than
in 1980. Hatching success was 63% in 1998, but only 21% in 1999 due to incr
eased predation, most likely by arctic fox (Alopex lagopus). Adult gulls an
d chicks abandoned nest-sites within a few hours of the hatching of the las
t chick and relocated to coastal ponds, where adults continued to attend ch
icks. In comparisons of the reproductive biology of Sabine's Gull to closel
y related "tern-like" gull species arid other "black-headed" gulls, Sabine'
s Gull showed a number of distinct ecological and behavioral differences an
d represents an ecological outlier within the Laridae.