Skip to main content

VIDEO: Starlings play foul in the streets of Rome

It’s that time of year again when city authorities in the Italian capital regularly close down some of the more clogged city streets. But it’s not cars that are the problem. It’s bird excrement, by the tonne, from starlings that migrate from northern Europe to live in Rome during the less brutal winter. Cleaners are out in force in the more affected areas where recent rainfall has made the streets dangerously slippery for motorcycle and mopeds. Meanwhile, sidewalks have become treacherous for pedestrians
January 4, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
It’s that time of year again when city authorities in the Italian capital regularly close down some of the more clogged city streets. But it’s not cars that are the problem.

It’s bird excrement, by the tonne, from starlings that migrate from northern Europe to live in Rome during the less brutal winter.

Cleaners are out in force in the more affected areas where recent rainfall has made the streets dangerously slippery for motorcycle and mopeds. Meanwhile, sidewalks have become treacherous for pedestrians, according to a %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal report in the The Guardian newspaper Visit report page false http://omnifeed.com/article/www.theguardian.com/world/2016/jan/04/rome-seals-off-roads-caked-with-droppings-from-birds-that-binged-on-olives false false%>.

A lot of the problem comes from fact that many birds have eaten olives in the country, which tends to make their excrement especially oily.

Starlings swarming above Rome’s historic buildings are a common site during winter. Just as common is the sight of cars -- parked under plane trees in which the birds roost -- covered in so much excrement that they appear totally brown.

Tourists, workers and inhabitants of the ancient city marvel at the constantly moving black masses of thousands of starlings, ducking and weaving above clear blue winter skies.

After hours, though, the so-called ‘poop control’, covered from head to toe in protective clothing, goes out into some streets and wander around with loudspeakers. They blast forth recorded starling warning calls to falsely alert resting birds in the plane tries of danger. They immediately fly off, but only to roost some other place.

Despite all the efforts of city workers, the Eternal City will suffer this eternal problem every year until warmer weather in northern Europe draws the starlings away from their winter home.

Related Content

  • Chinese inventor puts together vacuum cleaner-size petrol car
    December 15, 2014
    Traffic congestion and the cost of running a car have been pushing Chinese car manufacturers to think small, especially for electric vehicles. Electric scooter and motorcycle have long been popular and in the past several years more and more small electric cars are appearing on crowded urban roads One popular three-wheel electric vehicle has a large retractable bubble top, making it look like a futuristic car from a low-budget 1950s Hollywood movie. It may have a top speed of only 30kph, as the BBC report
  • UK driving association launches winter weather safety focus
    October 18, 2012
    UK-based driving group the Institute of Advanced Motorists (IAM) is launching its new winter driving campaign. The IAM’s winter driving campaign is intended to help motorists prepare their cars and drive them safely this winter. The campaign includes a website, drivingadvice.org.uk, containing advice, traffic updates and weather forecasts. The IAM will also be publishing weekly news releases and driving tips in reaction to the winter weather as part of the campaign.
  • VIDEO: Never give a queen a lift
    May 27, 2016
    A driver in Wales drove around for a day with an estimated 20,000 unwelcome passengers until the problem got to be too evident. The video shows the car of the 65-year-old grandmother, finally parked in the small town of Haverfordwest, literally buzzing with bees. Apparently, a queen bee got stuck on the vehicle and her community decided to follow the car and stick to it as well. It took two members of the Pembrokeshire Beekeepers' Association, a park ranger and some local people to coax the travelers
  • VIDEO: A little rain never hurt anyone and my car can take it
    June 10, 2016
    It wasn’t some city located in the globe’s tropical regions where rainfall is measured in metres each year. It was the northern European metropolis of London. This past week rain hammered down onto the fair city and immediate surroundings, creating flash floods that made driving in some areas very dangerous. But some drivers refused to be deterred from taking to their favourite road. A little rain wasn’t going to stop them – even if it amounted to a month’s rain, 35mm, in only several hours. It bei