Whether it’s a daisy in a pavement crack, or a fox rummaging through your bins, nature is all around you, even if you live in the middle of a city. There are those who embrace it, and those who discourage it, but there is no denying that these animals have just as much right to live here as us, so one way or another we are going to have to learn how to live in harmony with the wildlife around us.
Animals adapt to their environment and take advantage of it, they have to -or they have no chance of survival. A blue tit in the countryside will have to rely entirely on its foraging skills to find insects and other natural foods, whereas a blue tit living in urban conditions will mainly feed on discarded scraps of bread or meat, seeds that people provide in feeders, and when the milkman was a common sight, they used to peck through the top to get to the cream at the tops of the bottles. In harsh winters- when food is scarce, blue tits have even been known to peck around windows, probably attracted to the linseed oil in the putty.
Foxes- the typical animal that springs to mind when someone says ‘urban wildlife’, take advantage of the food we discard. To us it may be rubbish, but to them it is a meal, and we can’t exactly blame them for taking it. (would you turn down a free all-you-can eat buffet?). If there are not many small mammals like rabbits or voles around, they will have to scavenge for something else- anything else- that will get them by. Wherever they are, animals will adapt to the environment around them, making changes in their lifestyle to suit their needs. In very urbanized areas, where there aren’t any mature, native trees with natural cavities to nest in, birds like blue , coal and great tits mainly nest in the nest boxes that we provide, and robins will even nest in peg-baskets or letter boxes!
Recent studies have even shown that birds that adapt well to urban areas (for example, tits, crows, wrens and nuthatches) have larger brains in relation to their body size than birds that don’t frequent urban areas- like yellowhammers. The intelligence of our city-dwelling birds is incredible. For example, Crows learn to place nuts with hard shells in the road, wait for a car to run over it and crack it open, before swooping down and grabbing the nut. This suggests that larger brains make birds more adaptable to the changeable conditions of city-living.
Sadly, Humans and wildlife don’t seem to be able to live in close proximity together anymore, without colliding. Sometimes we forget that we ourselves are part of the natural world. Pigeons hung in nets fixed under bridges, hedgehogs tangled so badly in football-netting that they have swollen up, and countless rabbits, foxes, hedgehogs, and badgers run over by cars are all sorry sights that we see all too often today. I remember once seeing a blackbird with an entire carrier bag tangled around one leg.
The making of cities has harmed our wildlife, putting a strain on them to find new ways to live, so it is our duty to give something back! Putting up nest boxes, planting trees and flowers, providing food and water for birds and other animals, litter-picking to prevent animals becoming unnecessarily harmed, and digging ponds for amphibians to breed in and birds to drink and bathe in, will all help.
Articles etc for further information on the subject:
‘adaptable urban birds have bigger brains ‘ http://tinyurl.com/3vxf7zu
‘red light-runners’ – intelligent crow behavior http://tinyurl.com/62kjon9
Photograph and article by Amy (nature__lover)