birding-aus

Re: Song Thrush: Friday Bird in Focus

To: "" <>
Subject: Re: Song Thrush: Friday Bird in Focus
From: MS Weerheim <>
Date: Mon, 19 May 2008 10:56:48 +0200
Suitability of the urban environment for birds is not so much a matter of the 
density of people and their houses, but the form these houses take. Traditional 
neighbourhoods in my old country, the Netherlands, used to be quite rich in 
birds. Houses are built with multiple storeys, most often three, and 
neighbouring houses share a wall. This is a ground-saving building method which 
leaves more room for urban green (not to mention the immense heating costs 
saved when heat moves not up and away through the roof and walls, but to the 
floor above or the house next door).

Small and varied gardens with hedges and native herbs and grasses were ideal 
habitat for birds who like semi-open habitats like the song thrush (a native to 
the country), while green parks offer refuge for forest birds. Having worked as 
an urban ornithologist, it is amazing how rich birdlife in a city can be as 
long as the type of green is right.

Urban ecologists in my old country speak of the present century as "the new 
stone age". Partially due to the success with which popular gardening programs 
for years have promoted exotic plants in pots (no insects) and ornamental tiles 
instead of lawns and herbs. Undoubtedly it has a lot to do with making gardens 
as low-maintenance as possible without reducing green altogether. Sadly, the 
more insect-resistant garden plants are, the less useful they are for 
insectivorious birds. This difference is very clear when comparing insect 
richness and birdlife in native European Oak trees with those in the closely 
related but non native American Oak. The fact that the house sparrow does so 
well in Eastern Australia while it has been in steep decline in Europe for the 
past 30 years shows how important the type of urban nature is, and that drastic 
changes in gardening style comprise habitat destruction in no less form than 
degradation of native bushland. Anyone who wants to get rid of the little brown 
breadcrumb muncher need only look at European cities to know how to go about it.

I greatly cheer efforts of increasing the density of buildings inside cities in 
order to limit urban sprawl. Native bushland is being squished out everywhere 
and if land needs to be "sacrificed" for housing, it better be areas that are 
already disturbed. However, adjusting the style of building would make a huge 
difference with respect to how much land one human being needs to claim to live 
comfortably. Not to mention the many options available to include nesting 
opportunities in roof spaces and walls (without affecting the hygiene of the 
building - so much is possible and has already been done!) for higher-up 
nesting birds like tree martins.

And why do I see English rosegardens everywhere, despite the fact that I live 
in a country with the most amazing wildflowers imaginable?

Some interesting examples (sorry folks, it's all in Dutch) with pictures can be 
found at:
http://www.vogelbescherming.nl/content.aspx?cid=2366
http://www.vogelbescherming.nl/content.aspx?cid=2513
http://www.vogelbescherming.nl/documents/pdf-files/actieplan_stadsvogels.pdf

Maree
Perth, WA
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