Okay, but why do some birds thrive in cities?

Okay, but why do some birds thrive in cities?

E8. Cities can look like a concrete nightmare for wildlife… yet some birds are absolutely crushing it, while others vanish. In this episode of Okay, But... Birds, host Dr. Scott Taylor is joined by Dr. Fran Bonier, Professor at Queen’s University, to unpack what “urban birds” really are, why cities create winners and losers, and what it actually costs a bird to live the high-rise life.

In this episode, you’ll hear about:

  • Which birds tend to become “city birds,” and why some species thrive in urban spaces while others disappear
  • The concrete benefits and hidden costs of city living, plus the traits that predict an urban “winner”
  • How scientists test whether birds are adapting and learning fast vs. being filtered by city conditions, and what the biology says about stress in urban birds

All audio, video, and images in this episode are either original to Okay, But... Birds (© Okay Media, LLC) or used under license/permission from the respective rights holders. Bird media from the Macaulay Library is used courtesy of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology as follows:

  • House Sparrow audio contributed by Wil Hershberger, ML539706
  • Peregrine Falcon audio contributed by Mike Andersen, ML136378
  • Rosy-faced Lovebird audio contributed by Derek Solomon, ML168222
  • Sulphur-crested Cockatoo audio contributed by Mark Robbins, ML529861
  • White-crowned Sparrow audio contributed by Bob McGuire, ML207181
  • Sharp-shinned Hawk (Northern) audio contributed by David McCartt, ML137605
  • Chimney Swift audio contributed by Wil Hershberger, ML107413
  • Chimney Swift video contributed by Timothy Barksdale, ML440546

Tämä jakso on lisätty Podme-palveluun avoimen RSS-syötteen kautta eikä se ole Podmen omaa tuotantoa. Siksi jakso saattaa sisältää mainontaa.

Jaksot(27)

Okay, but did birds originate the open relationship?

Okay, but did birds originate the open relationship?

E26. We borrowed a phrase from human dating and tried to pin it on birds. Turns out they never needed the rulebook. Dr. Wenfei Tong, biologist and author of Bird Love, joins Scott to unpack what bird ...

11 Kesä 35min

Okay, but... boobies!

Okay, but... boobies!

E25. The blue-footed booby has become an internet personality: cartoon feet, a goofy strut, a name that practically begs to be a punchline. But Scott sat down with Dr. Carlos Zavalaga, Universidad Cie...

4 Kesä 34min

Okay, but what about birds that can't fly?

Okay, but what about birds that can't fly?

E24. Flight is the thing we associate most with birds, so what does it mean when a lineage gives it up? Dr. Scott Edwards, Harvard, joins Scott to unpack how flightlessness evolves, why it keeps happe...

28 Touko 32min

Okay, but can a bird really cooperate with humans?

Okay, but can a bird really cooperate with humans?

E23. Across sub-Saharan Africa, wild birds and people work together to find honey. No taming, no breeding, no domestication… just a partnership thousands of years in the making. Behavioral ecologist D...

21 Touko 33min

Okay, but can birds predict the weather?

Okay, but can birds predict the weather?

E22. Folklore says birds know a storm is coming before we do. Scott talks with Dr. Gunnar Kramer, Iowa State University, about what's actually happening when a tiny warbler decides it's time to fly, o...

14 Touko 34min

Okay, but can birds smell?

Okay, but can birds smell?

E21. We're talking sense and scents with Dr. Danielle Whittaker, Oregon State, and author of The Secret Perfume of Birds, who spent a decade unraveling a 200-year-old myth that started with John James...

7 Touko 34min

Okay, but what can we learn from a drawer of birds?

Okay, but what can we learn from a drawer of birds?

E20. Less than 1% of what's in a museum is actually on display. So what's happening with the other 99%? Scott talks with Dr. Sushma Reddy, Breckenridge Chair of Ornithology at the Bell Museum and Asso...

23 Huhti 35min

Okay, but are bird feeders helping or hurting?

Okay, but are bird feeders helping or hurting?

E19. More than 55 million Americans feed birds, and it's not exactly clear the birds asked us to. Dr. Olivia Sanderfoot, Research Scientist and Project Leader of FeederWatch at the Cornell Lab of Orni...

16 Huhti 32min

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