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The Jerusalem Post

What do birds do when there are no people?

 
 Crows in an urban area. (photo credit: YUVAL BARKAI)
Crows in an urban area.
(photo credit: YUVAL BARKAI)

"These findings highlight the fact that there are animals that depend on us in the city, as well as the flexibility of these animals and the complexity and diversity of the urban ecosystem.”

Noisy crows are highly intelligent, and ringneck parakeets are an invasive species in Israel that has made native species much less common in the skies and on tree branches. A new study at Tel Aviv University (TAU) has found that when humans are suddenly absent from the urban environment, the activity of the crows and ringneck parakeets that live in the area declines significantly. 

Conversely, the “graceful prinias” – small, insect-eating birds with long tails and short wings that are generally considered shy – increased their activity when there were fewer people around. 

“Graceful prinias” have short wings and long tapering tails. They are fairly drab birds, brown or grey above (sometimes with dark streaks) and whitish below.

The research was conducted under the leadership of research student Congnan Sun, Dr. Arjan Boonman, and Prof. Yossi Yovel, head of the Sagol School of Neuroscience and a member of TAU’s School of Zoology, in collaboration with Prof. Assaf Shwartz from the landscape architecture department at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa.They examined what happens to birds that are accustomed to living around humans when their habitat is suddenly emptied of humans. Among other birds, the researchers tested crows, ringneck parakeets (also known as rose-ringed parakeets), and “graceful prinias.”

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 Prof. Yossi Yovel, head of the Sagol School of Neuroscience and a member of the School of Zoology at TAU. (credit: TEL AVIV UNIVERSITY)
Prof. Yossi Yovel, head of the Sagol School of Neuroscience and a member of the School of Zoology at TAU. (credit: TEL AVIV UNIVERSITY)

The findings are surprising: While the crows and ringneck parakeets, who are characterized by their tendency to “follow” humans, are already accustomed to the noises they make and feed on their food scraps. They decreased their activity, while the graceful prinias increased their activity in the same area.

The study’s results were published in eLife under the title “Species and habitat-specific changes in bird activity in an urban environment during COVID-19 lockdown.”

Researchers used artificial intelligence to analyze data

As part of the new study, the researchers took advantage of the first COVID-19 lockdown to test the interrelationship between man and nature, and placed 17 recording, wide-band sensitive microphones in the Yarkon Park in northern Tel Aviv and the streets nearby.

With the help of artificial intelligence, an analysis of the recordings from the first days of the lockdown until 10 days after its end (March 25 to May 28, 2020) showed that the activity of the crows and ringneck parakeets was significantly lower (the calls from the crows in the park decreased by about 50% during the lockdowns and the chirping of ringneck parakeets in the park dropped by about 90%). In contrast, the “graceful prinias” benefited from the absence of people and increased their activity by about 12%.


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Yovel explained, “when the first COVID-19 lockdown began, we, like many researchers, in many fields, identified a rare opportunity to conduct field experiments that would examine how animals behave in the absence of humans. In general, many studies indicated the return of species to habitats that humans had ‘abandoned’ because of the coronavirus, but most of these studies were carried out through human observation, which requires humans, who are, as mentioned, the factor whose effect we want to examine.
“We decided to use microphones to allow us to monitor the activity of birds while humans aren’t present, and to disperse them densely throughout parks and residential neighborhoods. We chose the Yarkon Park area, heading south until Arlozorov Street, and placed 17 microphones at a distance of about 500 meters away from each other.
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We chose the ‘old north’ neighborhood of Tel Aviv because it is an urban area adjacent to a park, to enable a comparison between the activity of the birds in a park and the activity of the birds in a city.”
The researchers observed the changes in the presence of three particularly common and particularly loud bird species that differ from each other in the extent to which they exploit humans: hooded crow, ringneck parakeet, and “graceful prinia.”

The hooded crow is classified as a “human-following species,” that is, it stays near to humans and feeds on their food scraps. The ringneck parakeet is an invasive species, it also follows humans. The “graceful prinia” is classified as “adaptive” – it adapts itself to humans and knows how to get along in an urban environment, but it does not feed on humans’ food scraps and prefers to avoid their company.

In total, the researchers recorded 3,234 hours containing around 250,000 bird calls, using artificial intelligence to identify the calls and the birds that made them. During the lockdown, human activity in the residential areas increased by 49%, and human activity in Yarkon Park – when leaving homes to go to parks was still prohibited – decreased by 31%.
“First, we found that the overall activity of the birds, regardless of COVID-19, is 53% higher in the parks than in the streets adjacent to them,” said Yuval. “The parks are a center of activity for birds, and that is always true. On the other hand, a complex picture emerges from the lockdown period. The crows and ringneck parakeets, which usually subsist on leftover food from people in the park, searched for other food sources. The calls from the crows in the park decreased by about 50%, and the chirping of the ringneck parakeets in the park dropped by around 90%.
Conversely, the shy “graceful prinia,” an outstanding adaptor, increased its activity by about 12%. These findings highlight the fact that there are animals that depend on us in the city, as well as the flexibility of these animals and the complexity and diversity of the urban ecosystem.”

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