What We Can Learn From Urban Wildlife

The animals living in our cities are defying the odds

George J. Ziogas
4 min readSep 3, 2023
© Marco Attano / Adobe Stock

Nearly 4.5 billion people–56% of the world’s population–currently live in urban centers. People flock to cities for economic opportunities, access to healthcare and education, and other cultural and interpersonal amenities.

Animals are also increasingly becoming urban dwellers. As our cities grow due to their swelling human populations, more land is needed for urban areas, leading naturally to the loss of wildlife habitats. Some scientists project that land lost to urban expansion in the coming years will affect more than 30,000 animal species.

That’s a sobering number, and demands that we plan our cities to allow for wildlife conservation. Inspiringly, however, many animal species are already infiltrating and successfully adapting to our cities.

A new PBS nature program titled Wild Metropolis highlights the success stories of a wide array of animal species. In Amsterdam, grey herons learn to visit city fish markets for food; elephants in Sri Lanka learn to live alongside a well-traveled highway; rats have adapted so thoroughly that they now live almost exclusively in cities.

For a long time, we’ve thought humans, with their large brains and planning abilities were at the top of the heap…

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George J. Ziogas

Vocational Education Teacher | HR Consultant | Personal Trainer | Manners will take you where money won't | ziogasjgeorge@gmail.com