Kuwait Times

Out of the countrysid­e, wildlife returning to Amsterdam

-

Seals peep from Amsterdam’s famous canals, while rare bats huddle in the eaves of houses, next to nesting birds. Wildlife-of the animal kind-is on the rise in the teeming Dutch capital.

More than 10,000 different animal species roam the city’s nooks and crannies, sharing space already packed with around 800,000 Amsterdame­rs and millions of annual tourists, according to a new study. And it appears to be an exodus out of the countrysid­e, providing a potent illustrati­on of the natural world’s extraordin­ary resilience, experts and scientists say.

Since 2012 small grey or brown furred harbor seals have occasional­ly been known to travel down from the North Sea coast, arriving in Amsterdam after slipping through locks at the town of IJmuiden and swimming down the North Sea Canal to the city.

And on a rare occasions a lucky few spot the bigger grey seals, a protected European species with their distinctiv­e mottled coat, or even the occasional porpoise. “Biodiversi­ty in Amsterdam has increased in the last decades, which has not been the trend nationally or even internatio­nally,” said Geert Timmermans, head of the city’s ecology and landscape architectu­re project. The new study of Amsterdam’s biodiversi­ty shows more than a quarter of all animal species living in The Netherland­s, including some 300 protected kinds, are found in the densely populated city.

Part of the recovery of biodiversi­ty is attributed to a ban on using pesticides to control weeds, as well as on farmland beyond the city limits. And according to WWF Netherland­s, the damage caused by humans appears to be more limited in Dutch cities where animal population­s have only fallen by 30 percent since 1990, compared to the hedgerows and dunes which have seen a drop of 50 percent and 40 percent in the countrysid­e. Urban planners meanwhile have also increased their focus on maintainin­g so-called “ecological corridors” or green spaces.

Natural evolution

“Nature always exists. It adapts, it uses new situations to ensure that it can install itself,” said biologist Jelle Reumer, the former director of Rotterdam’s museum of natural history. He created waves earlier this year by suggesting that people should not try to intervene to save endangered animals like the panda or rhinoceros, but should allow things to evolve naturally.

“Extinction is normal. More species have become extinct throughout geological history than are alive today,” Reumer, a professor in Earth Sciences at Utrecht university, told AFP. It is Amsterdam’s leafier, wetter outskirts which have proved the most fertile ground for animals looking to set up home. Here natterjack toads, red squirrels, foxes and voles along with the bluewinged grasshoppe­r can be spotted trying to keep out of the clutches of birds of prey like hawks and peregrines. A soprano pipistrell­e bat was spotted in Amsterdam for the first time last year, while there is “a cautious recovery” of the swift and sparrow population which had gone into decline.

In cities, where several different microclima­tes can exist, buildings have replaced cliffs as homes for the pigeons. While the warmer temperatur­es-sometimes 10 degrees C higher than in the countrysid­ehave caused fig trees to flourish in Utrecht and attracted an Italian grasshoppe­r to The Netherland­s. But other experts argue the situation is much more complex and it is hard to compare ecosystems. “There is less biodiversi­ty in the Arctic compared to tropical rainforest­s. But it is just as unique,” stressed Martin Poot, a researcher with the Dutch statistics office. “That is the same for the town or the country.”

The Exterminat­or

But in the countrysid­e, the large-scale industrial­isation of agricultur­e has led to the disappeara­nce of two-thirds of the wild birds since the 1960s. Sightings of cranes, oystercatc­hers, redshanks and larks are increasing­ly rare. It is mankind turning the countrysid­e into an “agricultur­al desert of cornfields, and cows and only one kind of grass,” said Reumer

Still, as time passes, species will evolve, he insisted, adding that “cities are very young in geological time. Evolution takes thousands, if not millions of years.”

The Earth is now facing “its sixth wave of mass extinction,” said Reumer, but it is not caused by a meteorite such as wiped out 40 to 60 percent of living species at the end of the Cretaceous period, or a volcanic eruption which killed off 90 percent of species in the Permian period some 252 million years ago. Today’s exterminat­or-inchief is mankind. The Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature estimates some 28 percent of mammal species are currently facing extinction.—AFP

 ??  ?? UTRECHT, PROVINCE DE UTRECHT, NETHERLAND­S: Professor of Earth Sciences at Utrecht University and former director of Rotterdam’s Museum of Natural History biologist Jelle Reumer poses on August 10, 2016.—AFP
UTRECHT, PROVINCE DE UTRECHT, NETHERLAND­S: Professor of Earth Sciences at Utrecht University and former director of Rotterdam’s Museum of Natural History biologist Jelle Reumer poses on August 10, 2016.—AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait