Hedgehog Erinaceus europaeus
Description Small, bristly creatures with long snouts. Hedgehogs have five toes on their front paws and only four on their rear toes.
Habitat Regent’s Park.
When to see them After dark.
Notes
Hedgehogs are dying out at a rate of about a fifth of the population
every four years and are expected to be extinct in the UK by 2025.
Hedgehogs used to be relatively common in central London but now only
Regent’s Park still has them. The hedgehog can jump two feet in the air
but is remarkably stupid. The Guardian reported that ‘One owner tried
to teach his hedgehog a simple lesson – open the red door for lunch –
4,000 times. It looked the other way.’
Feature continues
The same
article continued – and try to read this without welling up – ‘Because
its spines are remarkably strong and elastic, and will cushion any
fall, hedgehogs are perfectly happy to fall into cattle grids, pits and
cellars because they bounce on landing. They don’t think about how to
get out afterwards. They doze in long summer grass where strimmers chop
them up. They get tangled up in tennis nets. They die inside expanded
polystyrene cups. The hedgehog smells something delicious left in the
bottom of the cup, pushes its snout in to lick up the remains and then
finds the cup stuck to its prickles. Many have been found dead with
yoghurt pots and ice-cream containers clamped to their faces.’
Poor, poor, stupid hedgehog.
Pelicans Pelecanus onocro- talus and Pelecanus occidentalis
Description Large birds with enormous, pouched bills and long wings.
Habitat Duck Island, St James’s Park.
When to see them The
pelicans get fed fresh fish at 3pm every day, but if you are very
lucky, you might see one of them eat a live pigeon! If not, the video
is still on YouTube.
Notes London pelicans were introduced to
St James’s Park in 1664 as a gift from the Russian ambassador. There
are currently four Great White Pelicans and one Louisiana Brown Pelican
living in the park.
Northern bottlenose whale Hyperoodon ampullatus
Description
Small-beaked whale, variable in colour. Small, triangular, peaked
dorsal fin about two thirds of the way down the back. The broad tail
flukes are unnotched. That’s unnotched, people.
Habitat Natural History Museum.
When to see them 10am-5.50pm every day.
Notes This
was the whale that had London all astir last year when she sailed down
the Thames earning plucky tabloid headlines and cheers – hurrah,
hurrah! – before she convulsed and died, crushed by her own body weight
and suffering multiple organ failure and dehydration. The carcass is
now in the Natural History Museum, but fear not, for the Thames is also
home to the occasional bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) or
harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena). It’s better than nothing.
Grey squirrel Sciurus carolinensis
Description Cute, grey, slightly manic, bushy tail.
Habitat All over London.
When to see them During the day, when they’re out looking for food. Often your food.
Notes
Playing a constant cat-and-mouse game (sorry for the confusion) with
the sort of people who like to leave food out for birds, the grey
squirrel is not the most popular of London’s pests, perhaps because its
introduction to the UK from America in 1876 has resulted in the
almost-complete obliteration of our even cuter native red squirrel
(Sciurus vulgaris). While you’d have to travel to Brownsea Island in
Poole Harbour to see the native reds closest to the capital, there are
reckoned to be around 3 million greys in the UK, although there have
been attempts to limit their population by feeding them birth-control
pills.
Dragonflies and damselflies Various
Description Dragonflies perch with their wings extended while damselflies lie them along the abdomen.
Habitat Ponds,
rivers, canals and streams. At Greenwich Peninsula Ecology Park (www.
urbanecology.org.uk), wardens will supply you with pond-dipping nets
and trays, magnifiers, bug jars and binoculars.
When to see them This is the very end of the prime spotting season – they only live for four months.
General Older
than dinosaurs, dragonflies have been in London since the UK had a
subtropical climate. There are dozens of species in London, the most
common being the common darter (Sympetrum striolatum) and the ruddy
carter (Sympetrum sanguinem), which sound like good names for pubs but
are actually bright orangey-red dragonflies. You can also see the
emperor (Anax imperator), one of the country’s largest dragonflies,
bright blue with bright green eyes and found mostly around garden ponds.
Sparrow Passer domesticus
Description Tiny brown bird with penchant for dust baths.
Habitat Used to be a London mainstay, but now in drastic decline.
When to see them Sparrows nest from March until July, usually under the eaves of buildings, but occasionally in dense shrubs and bushes.
General
Nobody seems quite sure why the once ubiquitous sparrow is in such
alarming decline in London, but one reason could be the reintroduction
of the self-defining sparrowhawk (Accipiter nisus). In 2005, a
sparrowhawk was responsible for a particularly gruesome hit before a
live audience of twitchers at the London Wetland Centre when it caught
and devoured a rare spotted crake (Porzana porzana) that had only
recently been sighted in London. Meanwhile, as the sparrow becomes ever
rarer, his less cute cockney contemporary, the rock pigeon (Columba
livia), goes from strength to strength.
Rats Rattus norvegicus
Description Big brown mice.
Habitat Six feet away, often in wheely-bins behind restaurants.
When to see them They’re usually active at night.
General The
notorious London rat is getting bigger, stronger and living longer
thanks to a protein-heavy diet of discarded burgers, kebabs and fruit.
Monster rats measuring 22 inches have been caught in south London,
almost double the rodent’s average size. Fact: rat’s teeth grow five
inches a year and are stronger than industrial diamonds.
Mice Mus musculus
Description Small, filthy
Habitat The Northern Line.
When to see them Generally at night, although on the tube you can see them scurrying out of tunnels at any time.
General The
house pet of the London Underground, nobody knows how many thousands of
dust-covered mice live down there on the tracks, eating discarded
newspapers and running away from trains. Possibly the dirtiest
commuters in London, other than that bloke who was flashing at Waterloo
and certainly wasn’t a senior judge. Strangely fascinating.
Water vole Arvicola amphibiu
Description Nervous little furry swimming rat.
Habitat
Water voles live on the banks of slow-flowing or static watercourses –
including canals and ponds – and are being reintroduced to Lea Valley.
When to see them They can be seen by day, but are very camera shy. When alarmed, they ‘plop’ characteristically into the water.
General
The water vole is struggling badly in the UK, with numbers down about
95 per cent since 1960 from 8 million to 220,000, partly because of the
disastrous decision by animal-rights activists who hadn’t done much
research, to release American mink (Mustela vison), a voracious
predator of the vole, from fur farms .
Otter Lutra lutra
Description
Elongated body, short legs with clawed webbed feet, flat head, small
eyes and ears, broad muzzle with prominent whiskers, and a thick tail.
Habitat Lea Valley.
When to see them They’re shy and nocturnal, so you’ll be lucky to spot one. If you do, send us a picture.
General
Last year, a dead otter was discovered on the Highway in Wapping,
suggesting that there was a hitherto unknown community of the
threatened species living somewhere around the Lea Valley area – the
nearest logical place the animal could have come from.
Ravens Corvus corax
Description Huge black bird, differs from crows by having a larger and heavier bill, a shaggy throat, and a wedge-shaped tail.
Habitat Tower of London.
When to see them Tues-Sat 9am-6pm, Sun-Mon 10am-6pm.
General
Charles II decreed there should always be at least six ravens in the
Tower and there are currently seven living there, thus sparing the
nation from instant collapse, plagues of pestilence, boils and being
ignored by tourists. They are Gwylum, Thor, Hugine, Munin, Branwen,
Bran, Gundulf and Baldrick, and are looked after by Derrick Coyle, the
ravenmaster, who warns, ‘One lapse, a bit of over-familiarity, and if a
bird goes for you it could have your eye out.’ He’s ex-military, so he
should know.
Have you spotted any of the creatures in our guide?
If you’ve got a photo of animals prowling the urban jungle we want to
see it. Send it to yourpics@timeout.com
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