Early morning. You open the window in the bedroom. Instead of the usual hum of cars, there is a trill. Clear, tinkling. It's a magpie singing on the old poplar. Or a sparrow on the cornice. Birdsong in the city is not an accident, it's a small miracle of survival. Birds have adapted to asphalt, exhaust fumes, and crowds of people. They sing louder, higher, faster than their forest relatives. And in this song — our hope that nature has not surrendered.
The urban orchestra is more diverse than it seems. There are constant soloists. The first is a large sparrow. Its song, "tsi-tsi-fi, tsi-tsi-fi," echoes from early spring to the middle of summer. The sparrow is bold, not afraid of people. The second is a chaffinch. Its tinkling trill with the characteristic "rum-rum-rum" is recognizable in any park. The third is a blackbird. It sings at dawn and dusk, its voice clear and melancholic, like a flute. The fourth is a swallow. It doesn't so much sing as mimic: it can insert a car alarm signal or a phone ringtone into its song.
In large parks and forest parks, you can hear nightingales (yes, in Moscow, in Serebryany Bor, nightingales sing scales!), orioles (a flute of the highest class), larks (a gentle, soft whistle). In residential areas, you can hear house sparrows (chirping like a ratchet), blue tits, greenfinches. And in industrial zones — city swallows, which don't sing, but chirp and chirp in flight.
The city is noisy. Cars, construction, air conditioners, subways. The noise level in the center of a megacity reaches 70-80 decibels, while in the forest — 20-30. Birds have to compete. Studies show that city birds sing at higher frequencies than forest birds. Because low frequencies are drowned out by the roar of cars. The chaffinch in Berlin sings an octave higher than the chaffinch in the Brandenburg Forest.
The second change is speed. City birds shorten the intervals between notes and sing faster trills. So the song better breaks through the noise. The third is time. In the city, birds start singing earlier, sometimes at 3 a.m., to outshine the morning rush hour. The fourth is volume. Yes, they literally scream. A nightingale in the city sings 10-15 decibels louder than in the forest.
But there is a price for this. High frequencies fade faster in the air, and after 50 meters the song is no longer heard. That is, the city bird sings for the near circle, not for distant attraction of a female. This changes mating behavior.
The same reasons as in the forest. Territorial demarcation: "This is my plot, go away." Attracting a female: "I am strong, healthy, I can sing." Warning of danger: special alarm signals. Teaching chicks. And — just for fun (yes, ornithologists do not exclude that birds sing when they are good).
In the city, there is an additional factor: competition for nesting sites. A hole, a cornice, a niche in the wall — all are as valuable as gold. The louder and more complex the song, the greater the chance that a weaker competitor will fly away. Therefore, city birds sing more aggressively and persistently than forest birds.
There is also the opposite side: some birds (such as house sparrows) in very noisy places almost stop singing. They switch to short signals or even remain silent. This reduces reproductive success. Sparrows almost do not nest in areas with constant noise above 75 decibels.
The biggest concert is spring, from March to May. At this time, males sing to the fullest to attract a pair. In April, in parks, there is a polyphonic buzz from 5 a.m. to 10 p.m. By the end of May, when nests are built and eggs are laid, singing subsides. In the summer, mainly young males sing, who have not yet found a pair.
In autumn, there is a second wave, but quieter and shorter. Birds sing before migration. In winter, in the city, you can only hear resident species: sparrows, starlings, woodpeckers (drumming instead of song). But they sing rarely — there is little energy, no concerts.
An interesting phenomenon: in cities with round-the-clock lighting (in the center of megacities), some birds are thrown off their cycle. They may start singing in December, taking the light of streetlights for an extended daylight. This exhausts the body, and the bird may die in the spring.
It seems to be aesthetics. But there are scientifically proven benefits. Birdsong reduces stress levels. Listening to recordings of forest singing in a clinic normalizes blood pressure in hypertensive patients. Children in schools with windows overlooking a park with birds concentrate better on lessons. The risk of depression in the elderly who listen to birds in the morning is 30 percent lower.
Birdsong is an indicator of environmental quality. If birds sing in a district, it means the air is not too dirty, there are green spaces, few poisons, and enough food. Ecologists call this "bioacoustic monitoring." The richer the bird community, the healthier the district.
There is even a term — "restorative environment." A city with good birdsong speeds up recovery after illness. That's why "quiet courtyards" with feeders and birdhouses are increasingly being equipped in new buildings. People are willing to pay for an apartment with a view of the bird choir.
The thing is that we, people, can make the city more welcoming for our feathered singers. First: leave old hollow trees. If a tree does not threaten safety — do not cut it, sparrows, swallows, swifts nest in the hollows. Second: hang out bird feeders and nest boxes. Right — at a height of 3-5 meters, the entrance to the southeast. Third: do not mow the lawns to the ground. Grass 10 cm high provides food for birds (weeds, insects). Fourth: set up feeders in winter, but not with bread, but with unsalted lard, seeds, oats.
What not to do: do not hang bells and shiny ribbons on the windows — birds get tangled. Do not let domestic cats out when chicks are learning to fly. Do not spray insects with poisons — birds are poisoned along with them.
City authorities can also help. Planting shrubs and trees of different species (so there is more food base). Limiting noise in parks and nature reserves. Creating eco-dams and green corridors between forest parks so that birds can migrate.
In the forest in spring — a symphony. Lark, nightingale, oriole, cuckoo, blackbird, warbler. Singing is not rushed, many pauses, low frequencies. It spreads for kilometers.
In the city — a fast techno-mix. The same species, but songs are truncated, high, nervous. Between trills, the roar of an airplane bursts. Sometimes birds weave urban noises into their song: a sparrow can copy the sound of a drill or a mobile phone ringtone. The chaffinch in Berlin includes an imitation of a car horn in its trill. It's both terrifying and wonderful at the same time.
Scientists conducted an experiment: a forest chaffinch does not react to a recording of urban song, and an urban one responds with aggression. They stopped understanding each other. Perhaps in a few hundred years, city birds and forest birds will become different species.
A 2022 study in Germany: 300 city dwellers wore stress monitors. Those who lived near a park where birds sang had 40 percent fewer cortisol peaks than residents of houses near highways. Visual green color did not give such an effect — the sound is important.
Another study (United Kingdom): patients after operations who were given recordings of birdsong needed 25 percent fewer painkillers. Song activates the parasympathetic nervous system, slows heart rate, lowers blood pressure.
There is a reverse effect: if there are no birds, people are sad. The level of depression in noisy business districts where only cars are heard is 50 percent higher. So birdsong is not a luxury, but an element of urban sanitation. Like street cleaning.
Imagine a morning in the city without birds. Silence. But not that cozy, but dead. Only the sound of tires and the hum of air conditioners. This is already a reality in some districts of Mexico City, Beijing, Delhi. There, due to smog and noise, birds have died out or flown away. And people are running away from these districts. Because the absence of birds is a sign of a dying environment.
Birdsong in the city is a litmus test. If they sing, it means the city is still alive. It means there is hope for a healthy future. Therefore, when you hear the trill of a sparrow outside the window next time, don't close the window. Listen for a minute. It's happiness. Small, but important.
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