|
Wildlife
The crows of BeijingPosted by Jeremy Goldkorn, December 11, 2007 11:54 AM
Danwei has recently published several stories about the surprising range of wild animals in Beijing and the surrounding countryside from snakes and leopards to hog badgers and weasels.
Continuing the series, this post seeks to answer a wildlife question from reader Tom Gorman: Xinhua has also noticed the crows; the image above was published on Xinhua's website in January 2006 with only the caption "At midnight on January 2, some crows settle in the branches of poplar trees in the Wangfujing area, 'keeping watch" over Chang An Street as the noise of the day slowly fades into silence." Looking around the Chinese Internet, you can find references to crows gathering not only at Dongdan but also at Wanshou Road (万寿路) and South Xuyuan Road (学院南路). According to this transcript of a Beijing TV science program, the crows congregate in those areas because they like to settle in the large poplar trees found there. Finally, it seems there are two species of crow that live in and around Beijing: the Large-billed Crow (Corvus macrorhynchos or 大嘴乌鸦) and the Carrion Crow (Corvus corone or 小嘴乌鸦), but we have not established which species is found in downtown Beijing.Do any Danwei readers know which species is found in the city, and can anyone offer an explanation for the crows' love of Dongdan? Links and Sources—Some Chinese bird websites
|
Partner Links
Jobs in China
Recent Comments
Gareth on
Gamble your life away in ZT Online
Inst on
The Mouse looms over Shanghai
Anonymous on
Giant Mao Zedong stands alone in the autumn cold
Joel Marti on
A centenarian monk reads the newspaper
little Ale on
Those damned English experts
China Media Timeline
Major media events over the last three decades
Danwei Model Workers
![]() Recommended blogs and new media
Books on China
Xujun Eberlein's Apologies Forthcoming: Hong Kong's Blacksmith Books has published a short story collection by Xujun Eberlein.
Princess Der Ling: Two Years in the Forbidden City: Two years in the Forbidden City is largely a reminiscence of the minutiae of life for one of history's most powerful women, by one of her court attendants, a Manchu noble's daughter by the name of Der Ling.
Carl Crow's The Long Road Back to China: In 1939 Carl Crow - an American journalist, advertising executive and author who had lived in Shanghai for 25 years until forced out by the Japanese - travelled up the Burma Road from Rangoon to Chongqing on assignment for Liberty magazine - 'the most interesting assignment I have ever been given'.
Front Page of the Day
A different newspaper every weekday
From the Vault
Classic Danwei posts
+ The Dazhai Spirit gets religion (2007.10): In a Window of the South (南风窗) feature on model village Dazhai (大寨), Li Xiangping (李向平) writes about the role religion, in the form of the Pule Temple, plays in the village's changing identity. + Will the Boat Sink the Water? a review by Göran Leijonhufvud (2006.11): Göran Leijonhufvud, former China correspondent of several Scandinavian newspapers, is now researching village elections in minority nationalities areas in Yunnan. + One Country, Two Versions (2005.02): CEPA eases co-productions between the mainland and Hong Kong, but does it undermine creativity?
Danwei Archives
Danwei Feeds
Via Feedsky
or Feedburner |





Comments on The crows of Beijing
Those crows by Wangfujing are a portent of the fall of the regime. Well, we live in hope.
The crows have been there for the past decade I've been here, refusing to budge as the street has been widened and construction added. They used to hover over the Putt-Putt where the basketball courts are today, and they continue to paint the sidewalk with their droppings. There's no mention of them in memoirs that describe the polo pitch that was there before. In true Beijing Lore form, a street cleaner said there was an old official at the neighboring Ministry of Commerce who decreed they could not be poisoned. Say, why doesn't Beijing have a mini golf course anymore? Dunkin' Donuts, Popeye's and Putt-Putt, we hardly knew thee.
Has anyone partaken of that Beijing delicacy, 乌鸦炸酱面?
Birds are surprisingly social animals, and sleeping in large groups is safer than sleeping alone. I'm not sure there's anything to it beyond that. They've found a tree -- they like the tree -- they've stayed in the tree over several generations.
I am reminded of the gang of Sulfur-Crested Cockatoos that have terrorized Sydney's Hills Freeway for almost a decade. They live in an adjacent nature reserve, and regularly swoop cars. They are strikingly reminiscent of a group of teenage boys goading each other on to increasingly risky behavior!
...can anyone offer an explanation for the crows' love of Dongdan?
What, crows aren't allowed to cruise too?
Looks like "evil" crows from Tokyo...
The crows also like to nest in the trees on the northern side of the road - this is evident from the large strip of bird shit that runs west from Wangfujing past Beijing Hotel, Raffles and Guibing Lou and right on through to the entrance of Tianan'men Dong subway stop. Street cleaners seem to make regular attempts to clean up the droppings but are fighting a losing battle. The birds always seem to return to the area at dusk and seem to spend their days out Haidian way.
Crows roost in groups (some very large) everywhere on the planet they are found, and these collective roosts are biggest, I believe, in winter (when they aren't breeding). My first years in Beijing (1981-83) I used to watch hundreds of crows flying high east to west every winter evening. I assume they were heading toward roosts. Roosting areas (groups of trees) in Beijing and suburbs are a LOT harder to find now than in the past. Crows are so very smart and so very able to adapt to human settlement, somebody wrote somewhere, that they are likely to be the last birds on the planet, once we've driven all the rest to extinction. Beijing, for now, still has other birds. My wife and I saw 60 or so different species in and near Beijing in four months in 2006. Including a Kestrel circling the Yonghegong.
look~
http://wuya.org