|
Over the long haul of time, the growth of cities has taken an
enormous toll of wildlife habitats and affected those remaining in a
number of ways. First, the construction of the city has completely
destroyed many habitats and has modified others. The former is
particularly true where wetlands have been filled. Second, the
construction of cities has altered or destroyed migratory routes. In a
few cases, modification has been a wildlife boonsuch as properly
planted cities where large numbers of street trees have proliferated the
"edge effect" of the forest and thus provided more habitat for birds
than a natural forest in the same area.
The natural components of the city, however, form a new ecosystem
that can contain some but not all of the animals previously present. In
considering wildlife and the city we must ask whether there are habitat
connections with the hinterland, the stream valley, the greenbelt, the
river, the watershed, or the lake that remain undeveloped. Are there
pockets of natural vegetation in the form of parks? Are there trees
along the streets? Are the yards and gardens of the city dwellers
suitable habitat for much of the natural wildlife that we find pleasing?
Are there food plants?
Probably food plants are the single most important factor in
attracting wild birds to the city. Our penchant for neatness severely
limits the growth of food trees, particularly wild black cherries and
other seed plants that most attract birds. By eliminating kitchen
gardens and replacing them with shade trees and turf, we have further
inhibited urban Wildlife.
Yet the feeding of birds in many cities is big business. Most
hardware stores sell wild bird wed mixtures and suet seed cakes, as well
as bird feeders, bird houses, and an array of apparatus and
paraphernalia for feeding and housing birds.
In most cities, the larger and more dangerous animals have been
eliminated or destroyed and the rest have fitted themselves into the
niches that remain. The animal wildlife, like the plant life, can be a
bioassay for the quality of life, and this aspect of wildlife in the
city is perhaps as important as any other. Songbirds, squirrels, game
fish in the streams, racoon, mink and beaver, all are indicators of a
quality environment. Rats and vermin, houseflies, cockroaches, and
similar insects are indices showing that the environment is in poor
condition. Wild bird populations that are limited to starlings and
sparrows indicate oversimplification, a downgrading of the
environment.
Since humane control the city ecosystem, they can and should regulate
wildlife. When they abdicate this responsibility, the quality of all
life suffers. Cats and dogs have become feral and in many instances must
now be considered a part of the wildlife in urban predator/prey
relationships. In suburban areas where dogs are kept for companionship
or for protection, many are permitted to run loose. Children and adults
are in danger of being attacked by the packs that inevitably form under
these circumstances. Feral dog packs have been reported in such diverse
locations as Montgomery County, Maryland, Beverly Shores in the Indiana
Dunes, and in numerous Southern towns. In one of the latter, a poll
taken among school children showed that their greatest fear was attack
by a dog pack. It is possible that coyotes, foxes, and wolves regulate
house cats and in some instances dogs too. Authenticated records testify
to red foxes preying upon cats, and it is now a common sight to see
coyotes in the suburbs of Los Angeles where not a few pets become their
prey.
The answer to control of wildlife in the city, as in all wildlife
programs, lies in habitat management. If a city is to accommodate
wildlife, it must not only accommodate the physical presence of the
animal but also provide a home range for it. Large ungulates and large
carnivores, in addition to being potentially dangerous to man, require
more space for adequate home ranges than a city is able to provide.
In addition, there is the need of migratory animals for continuity of
habitat. Whether they are moving north and south or migrating from
winter to summer feeding ranges, such animals cannot make their
necessary journeys without the life support systems provided by a
dependable string of habitats along their ways. Moreover, the biological
quality of the habitat and protection from predation by man is
important. Migratory animals must have adequate cover, abundant food and
if the animal is shy of man, there must be easy escape from man and his
activities.
The chemical quality of the habitat is another consideration. This
centers around the quality of two essential elementsair and water.
Water and air pollution have the effect on natural ecosystems of
"simplifying" them by eliminating some of the components. The result of
a system thus made poorer is to lower the efficiency of energy use;
fewer ecological niches, fewer resident life forms, a less diverse
and less energetic system.
Man is not a good "bioassay" for air and water quality. All
the plants of the city and fish in the streams could die from lowered
chemical quality of the habitat before men would consider himself
seriously damaged by the quality of the air and water. There Is ample
evidencein places like Mexico City, Tokyo, and Los Angeles, to
name threethat the pollution of air and water severely stresses
the vegetation. Yet man continues to live in these areas, apparently
only slightly inconvenienced by the enormous pollution.
City dwellers take their water supplies from rivers that are
incapable of nourishing anything but trash fish. A recent study of the
Potomac River showed that while the water is unlikely to be lethal to
humans, a great number of chemical pollutants are present in
concentrations just low enough not to constitute a direct threat to man.
The Potomac pollutants are not the kinds of materials that are removed
by water treatment prior to consumption by man.
|