Light-and-sound attacks used against starlings

Starlings migrating from northern Europe fly by a statue on November 6, 2012 in Rome. About one-million starlings migrate in Rome during autumn and winter time and draw beautiful patterns in the sky before spending the nights in the trees by the Tiber river, creating chaos in the neighborood with their droppings. AFP PHOTO / GABRIEL BOUYS

Starlings migrating from northern Europe fly by a statue on November 6, 2012 in Rome. About one-million starlings migrate in Rome during autumn and winter time and draw beautiful patterns in the sky before spending the nights in the trees by the Tiber river, creating chaos in the neighborood with their droppings. AFP PHOTO / GABRIEL BOUYS

Published Nov 16, 2012

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Rome - Tired of bird droppings on the city's most famous monuments, local authorities in Rome are resorting to unusual measures to try and scare off a million starlings that migrate to the Eternal City every year.

Armed with loudspeakers and light projectors, workers dressed in white overalls and masks have been seen walking around at sunset along the tree-lined embankments of the Tiber River where starlings tend to congregate.

The loudspeakers blast out shrieks of alarm used by the starlings and the projectors are shone into the trees to scare off the birds.

“Their reaction is immediate,” city hall said in a statement on Friday.

“The starlings abandon the area and get as far away as possible from the area, which they consider dangerous,” it said, adding that the method “respects the environment and the birds and does not create a nuisance for residents.”

The sound-and-light attacks last around an hour and are always carried out at dusk for three days in a row to ensure the desired effect.

Rome has the highest number of starlings in Italy - around a million are estimated to migrate there every autumn and winter. - Sapa-AFP

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