The U's dominated early on but the Gulls took the lead through captain Chris Hargreaves' sweet 18-yard strike.
The Gulls are currently second from bottom in the table, with just two wins from their first 10 games.
Now that Amble has a smart new purifying works, the gulls no longer circle over the end of the underwater sewage pipe.
ECONOMIST: For some, sewage is pollution. For others, it's nutrition
And it will be a sense of deja-vu for the U's, who lost last year's final to the Gulls' Devon rivals Exeter.
Never the cries of the gulls, only, in summer, the crickets, cicadas.
The majority of Buckle's squad is made of the players who took the Gulls to promotion from the Blue Square Premier last season.
Rendell saw an ambitious 25-yard volley deflected just over for Cambridge before the Gulls' Chris Robertson had a similar effort fizz just wide.
The Gulls started the second half well and came within inches of an equaliser when Stevens was unable to turn home Zebroski's low cross.
If Bush loses, he might devote time to standing on the beach at Padre Island with pebbles in his mouth, orating at the gulls.
The Gulls were looking the hungrier of the two sides, and Lee Mansell was allowed to run unchallenged before firing a long-range shot into the keeper's hands.
He was wrapped in the sensation of her absence, the gulls crying and circling, the crash and drag of the waves, a cold wind slicing underneath his clothes.
The Gulls have reached the play-offs twice since then - losing controversially in the semi-final against Preston North End in 1995 and then 1-0 in the final at Wembley against Colchester in 1998.
That left the Gulls with 10 minutes to find a leveller but Crawley held out, leaving their 1, 200 travelling fans to begin their celebrations at the final whistle and also start thinking about who they want to face in round five.
And then sounds of people relaxing, lovers relaxing on the beach and talking to one another and the sound of the wind blowing and the sea gulls and the waves breaking.
In contrast, the number of rural gulls in the UK have declined significantly in recent decades, according to the RSPB.
BBC: Who What Why: Why are there so many seagulls in cities?
In the past swooping gulls stole food from people sitting at tables outside the cafe.
"It's an explosion, they are behaving like hunting animals, " said Patrick Moenaert, mayor of the towns of Brugge and Zeebrugge, which recently built two underground dumps to keep gulls from the garbage.
With the whole of the coast developed, she said, gulls will increasingly nest in the town roofs, which resemble the cliffs they favor in nature.
Since the 1970s, the number of herring gulls has more than halved.
BBC: Who What Why: Why are there so many seagulls in cities?
But Rock argues that these two things do not fully explain the rise in urban gulls and says more research needs to be done.
BBC: Who What Why: Why are there so many seagulls in cities?
The consensus was that gulls, who have been moving inland and into large towns in greater numbers recently, were about as welcome as Viking marauders at a Women's Institute picnic.
Gulls swoop off the sides of the winding path, down the sheer drop to the white sand and turquoise sea hundreds of feet below.
However, as total European numbers of some gulls - including the herring gull - are actually falling, such a course of action is banned under "biodiversity" laws unless a licence is obtained.
Overhead, gulls and gannets ride the thermals or roost in noisy colonies on the cliff faces.
The salt lakes fill with fresh water, and millions of water birds - pelicans, stilts, shags and gulls - can be seen feeding on the superabundant fish and insect life.
For hours we might sit and watch coverage of one of the political conventions from the 1960s or raw video of sea gulls flying over Long Island Sound.
No amount of boom will protect waterbirds like pelicans, gulls and terns, because diving into the water for fish is how they eat.
One of the main reasons for the falling numbers is that changes to fishing practices in the UK have resulted in food shortages for rural gulls, says Rock.
BBC: Who What Why: Why are there so many seagulls in cities?
Some of the casualties are natural, like turtle hatchlings dropped by gulls onto a construction site.
He estimates there are 100, 000 pairs of breeding urban gulls on rooftops around town and cities across the nation.
BBC: Who What Why: Why are there so many seagulls in cities?
应用推荐