Bird on the Street: The Unnatural History of Starlings

£25.00

Available for Pre-order. Due November 2026.

Bird on the Street: The Unnatural History of Starlings Author: Format: Hardback First Published: Published By: Columbia University Press
string(3) "216"
Pages: 216 Illustrations and other contents: 36 images, 4 b&w, 32 color insert Language: English ISBN: 9780231213349 Categories: , , , ,

Starlings cause a lot of trouble. Labeled one of the world’s worst invasive bird species, they devastate farms, drive out native birds, and interfere with aircraft. Many birdwatchers openly despise starlings, or more politely, look down on them. Yet all the things that lead us to see starlings as pests are also signs of their extraordinary adaptability. Among the most successful birds on the planet, they are easy to overlook—and too easy to blame. Blending natural history with science memoir, Bird on the Street traces how starlings illuminate the mechanisms of evolution and the relationship between humans and wildlife. Following starlings from the streets and skies into museums and laboratories, Julia M. Zichello invites readers into the daily practice of science: the small discoveries and frequent setbacks, moments of doubt as well as wonder. If we set aside our hostility and see starlings for what they are, Zichello argues, we gain new insight into not only evolution and ecology but also ourselves. Humans introduced starlings to new continents and then relentlessly transformed landscapes into ones perfectly suited to their success. Ultimately, this invasive species offers a mirror reflecting the human tendency to reshape the natural world. At once scientifically rigorous and deeply personal, this book shows how the story of a familiar bird leads to a richer understanding of our ecological and emotional entanglements with nature.

Weight0.344736 kg
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While not universally embraced, starlings are adaptive, clever, and remarkably successful. Bird on the Street highlights what starlings have taught us about evolution and ecology. Readers will leave with a new appreciation of starlings, invasive species, and even ourselves. -- Lauren Riters, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Author Biography

Julia M. Zichello is an evolutionary biologist and science writer. She teaches at Hunter College, City University of New York, and is a research associate at the American Museum of Natural History. Her writing has appeared in the New York Times, Scientific American, and Connecticut Audubon.