In the woods across from our houses, we often encountered coyotes, deer, raccoons, squirrels and many species of birds. These woods have trails which are heavily used by humans: dog walkers, talking friends and families, solitary thinkers, kids playing, teenagers doing who knows what, joggers and cross-country runners from the nearby high school. How is it that these animals can coexist with all that human activity? Library resources - ebooks Human-wildlife interactions: turning conflict into coexistence Urban bird ecology and conservation Urban evolutionary biology When raccoons fall through your ceiling: the handbook for coexisting with wildlife Library resources - evideos The green economy: wildlife management Species and sprawl: a road runs through it The urban jungle deadly dozen Online articles and websites Wildlife in Portland Living with urban wildlife With cities on lockdown, animals are finding more room to roam The real reason we’re seeing more wildlife during the pandemic Splooting squirrels are a thing: here’s what they’re doing and why Urban wildlife refugees The Urban Wildlife Working Group Online videos Animals evolve to live in cities Abundant wildlife revealed by trail camera (Oregon Zoo) Modest mouse – coyotes (official music video) Searching for Seattle’s urban carnivores Searching for wildlife in the heart of urban Portland