It's the gulls eating a glut of flying ants that they are getting drunk from:
"The ants then turn to formic acid in their stomachs and act like 
alcohol - causing the gulls to lose inhibitions around humans and 
brazenly steal food.
    
    
    
    They are left so tipsy the gulls have been seen flying straight into buildings and into the paths of moving cars.
    
    
    
    Dr Rebecca Nesbit, an entomologist with the Society of Biology, 
said the problem is worse this summer because the hot weather is 
bringing out record numbers of flying ants.
    
    
    
    She added: "That isn't so good for the birds - it leaves them a bit drunk."
    
    
    
    RSPB spokesman Tony Whitehead added: "Gulls love flying ants and 
as they come out of the ground the birds will feast on them early in the
 morning and late in the evening."
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