As billions of people across the planet have retreated indoors to combat the spread of the coronavirus, wildlife roams more freely. Empty streets and the absence of people have made animals bolder while animals normally dependent on tourists, desperately seek food.
A pack of jackals eat dog food that was left for them by an Israeli woman, at Hayarkon Park in Tel Aviv, Israel, April 11, 2020.
A wild boar roams a street of the Carmel neighborhood, in the northern city of Haifa, Israel, April 11, 2020.
An approximately one-year-old puma roams the streets of Santiago, on March 24, 2020, which according to the Agricultural and Livestock Service came down from the nearby mountains in search of food as fewer people are on the streets due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
Monkeys climb on a car as they are being fed with potatoes by a resident at Ode village, March 25, 2020, during the first day of a 21-day government-imposed nationwide lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic, some 25 kms from Ahmedabad, India.
Thousands of birds flock to Agua Dulce beach now largely absent of beachgoers in Lima, Peru, March 24, 2020. The birds began swarming the empty shores since Peru's president declared a state emergency and ordered people to stay home because of the spread of COVID-19. Peru confirmed its first coronavirus case on March 6.
A raccoon walks in almost deserted Central Park, April 16, 2020 in New York City. Gone are the softball games, horse-drawn carriages and hordes of tourists. In their place, pronounced birdsong, solitary walks and renewed appreciation for Central Park's beauty and more room to play for the resident wildlife.
A newly-hatched baby leatherback sea turtle makes its way to the sea for the first time at a beach in Phanga Nga district, Thailand, March 27, 2020.
Five female roe deer and a young fawn roam on a nearly-empty sidewalk in Zakopane, southern Poland, April 16, 2020.