The Self-Selecting Species: Cities, Screens, and the Evolutionary Arena We Built
It could be on the subway, walk down the road to a kiosk or local shop and maybe on the table at a restaurant. At almost every turn, everyone or most people are using their phones, form one person to the other. When the news flips on, they are alarming calls about the digital age, causing all types of trouble to humans to turn back to the forest. Contrastingly, animals are seemingly adapting to our increasingly digital cities with some ease, noted by the way we encounter various animals in the city or have lived with some for years. In parts of India, rhesus macaques leap across electric lines and temple roofs, exploiting food offerings and traffic rhythms with remarkable agility. On the edges of cities in South Africa, baboons and warthogs test the porous boundary between savanna and suburb. In United States, raccoons open trash bins with near-primate dexterity while coyotes navigate freeway underpasses like seasoned commuters. Cities, it turns out, do not eliminate nature. Th...