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How do they know?

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predding | 11:43 Sun 07th Nov 2004 | Animals & Nature
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We live in a remote area and have very few seagulls visit. Just the other day we were driving by a newly plowed field and noticed several hundred seagulls feeding. How do they know where to feed and how are they attracted so fast to something like this?
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I'd say it was the scent of the soil, as it is very strong to a well tuned animal like the seagull when freshly ploughed.

As added info to back-up Kilalas' answer, we work 25 miles off-shore, and when there is an off-shore wind blowing, we can smell agricultural activities like slurry spreading and grass cutting/hay making - and thats just with human nostrils (or is it olefactory sense?)

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