
The nests have been sent to museums for testing (Picture: Oleg Malchenko/east2west news)
Birds in war-ravaged Ukraine are building nests using fibre optic cables instead of twigs.
These ultra-thin wires have turned most of Ukraine’s 746-mile front line into a glistening spider web,found draped over buildings and tangling in trees.
But they’re not for decoration – both Ukraine and Russia have lined the region with the cables to prevent the other from jamming attack drones.
Birds are making the most of these wires – which can stretch up to 20km in length – by building nests from them,rather than using twigs,moss or grass.
Yana Hrynko,a senior researcher at Kyiv’s War Museum, said at least two of these nests have been found so far.
Hrynko said experts don’t know what type of bird made the nests or when they were built,and have sent them for testing.
The nests,experts say,show how much the four-year war has changed Ukraine (Picture: Oleg Malchenko/east2west news)
The scraggly nests may be stronger than those made of twigs (Picture: Oleg Malchenko/east2west news)
The spools of cables are used to guide attack drones (Picture: Social media /east2west news)‘Objects such as bird nests with fragments of optic fibre demonstrate the change in the nature of war,’ she added.Several nests like these have been discovered in frontline regions of Donetsk,Kharkiv and Zaporizhzhia in recent weeks,Ukrainian personnel told Reuters.A support battalion of the 12th Azov Brigade in the Torets direction shared a photo of the creepy-looking nest on Telegram last month.‘This is just one of dozens of manifestations of how nature survives in the flames of war. Between hundreds of drones,assaults,shelling,and kilometres of scorched earth,’ the brigade said.One of the nests was found after a Russian glide bomb knocked down a tree in Donbas.Olena Tregub,secretary general of the Ukrainian civil society group,NAKO,called the pile of cables and grass an ‘apocalyptic bird nest’.Apocalyptic bird nest.
Examples of the mud-covered rubbish birds use to make nests (Picture: Ecology/Auke-Florian Hiemstra)But this rubbish may be dirty and nestlings may gobble it up,resulting in sickness or death.Auke-Florian Hiemstra,a biologist based in the Dutch city of Leiden,said that Ukraine’s cable-filled nest-building has its pros and cons.She said that,as much as the birds may become entangled in the spools of cable,they might be using it to strengthen their nests.‘We’re going to look for DNA traces still in a nest to determine who actually made the nest,” she said,with one of the artificial nests sent to her team.‘I have never seen nests like this before – and I have seen many,many bird nests.’Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at .For more stories like this,check our news page.