In the heart of Singapore's bustling Chinatown, an unusual wave of aggression from a small group of crows has left pedestrians on edge. Outside the iconic Chinatown Complex, at least 10 individuals have reported being swooped at or pecked by three persistent house crows over the past week, with most victims being balding or thin-haired men. These incidents, unfolding primarily between 10am and 5pm daily, have sparked curiosity, concern, and even light-hearted memes among locals navigating the busy streets lined with shops and eateries.
The attacks typically involve the crows circling overhead before diving toward unsuspecting walkers along Smith Street and nearby areas. Videos circulating online capture the shock on victims' faces—one elderly man visibly recoils after two crows target the back of his head, while another narrowly escapes a close swoop near a spiral car park. No serious injuries have been reported, but the sudden nature of the dives has prompted calls for caution in the vicinity.
Theories Behind the Balding Bias
What makes balding men the apparent focus? Wildlife experts dismiss popular notions like sunlight reflecting off shiny scalps confusing the birds. Instead, the selective targeting points to the remarkable intelligence of crows. House crows, scientifically known as Corvus splendens, possess exceptional facial recognition abilities, rivaling humans in some studies. They can hold grudges for years, remembering and reacting aggressively to individuals who previously harmed them or their kin.
Kalai Vanan Balakrishnan, CEO of the Animal Concerns Research and Education Society (ACRES), suggests a past encounter might be at play: "Someone bald in the past did not treat these crows well, and they might have mistaken all bald people for the same person." This aligns with global observations where crows mob perceived threats based on visual cues. Alternatively, the timing coincides with the house crow breeding season, peaking from April to May in Singapore's tropical climate. During this period, parent birds fiercely defend nests built high in urban trees, interpreting any nearby movement—including human pedestrians—as a potential danger to their chicks.
Business owners near the site corroborate this, noting the crows' recent arrival and likely nesting in a large nearby tree. "It has happened nearly every day lately," one wholesaler told reporters, adding that the birds circle before striking but haven't deterred customers significantly yet.
House Crows: Urban Invaders Explained
House crows arrived in Singapore around 1930, likely via ships from South Asia, where they are native. Unlike native species, these opportunistic omnivores thrive in cities, scavenging waste, raiding nests, and displacing local birds. Adults measure 40 cm long with glossy black feathers, a gray neck collar, and piercing white irises. They form massive roosts—up to thousands—amplifying noise and droppings that foul public spaces.
Breeding involves pairs constructing bulky nests from twigs and garbage in tall trees near food sources like hawker centers. Females lay 3-5 eggs, incubated for 17-19 days, with fledglings dependent for weeks. This vulnerability triggers hyper-vigilance: crows dive-bomb intruders within 10-20 meters of nests, using beaks and talons in coordinated assaults. In Singapore's dense urban fabric, such defenses clash with human activity, escalating conflicts.

Singapore's Mounting Crow Menace
This Chinatown episode is no isolated quirk amid a national surge. The house crow population ballooned to about 160,000 by 2024—over 20 times the 2016 figure—fueled by abundant refuse and limited predators. Public complaints tripled from 5,000 in 2020 to 15,000 in 2025, with aggression reports quadrupling from 460 to over 2,000 cases annually. Hotspots include Yishun, where one woman endured 10+ pecks despite an umbrella; Bishan, with 10 attacks in 20 minutes; and even Orchard Road malls.
Urbanization aids their spread: crows exploit hawker centers, wet markets, and open bins, adapting to traps and deterrents through learned behavior. Their predation on native birds like mynas and kingfishers disrupts ecosystems, while roosts create health hazards from feces harboring bacteria.
NParks' wildlife page details these threats, urging reduced feeding to curb growth.
NParks Strikes Back: Shooting Resumes
Facing stalled non-lethal efforts, the National Parks Board (NParks) reinstated crow shooting in late March 2026 after a six-year pause. Operations kicked off in Yishun on March 24, expanding to eight more districts like Jurong, Bishan, and Punggol. Trained contractors from Certis Cisco and the Singapore Gun Club use air rifles in cordoned zones, aiming upward for safety.
- 2025 achievements: 9,000 nests removed (vs. 600 in 2021), 13,000 crows trapped/euthanized (vs. 1,800).
- Trials: Dead crow effigies, distress calls, reflective CDs—short-term at best against clever foes.
Minister Chee Hong Tat emphasized complementing shoots with trapping and education, as crows' trap-shyness demanded escalation. Critics like ACRES advocate integrated pest management, prioritizing waste control and public behavior change.
Historical Timeline of Crow Control
Singapore's battle dates to the 1970s: systematic shooting began then, peaking amid 1990s population booms. A 2020 halt followed safety lapses—stray pellets hit homes—shifting to humane traps and nest pulls. Yet resurgence forced 2026 revival. Globally, parallels exist: US states hunt nuisance crows; Australia uses poisons judiciously.
Step-by-step evolution:
- Pre-2020: Shooting dominant.
- 2020-2025: Non-lethal focus, population rebounds.
- 2026: Hybrid approach reinstated.
Voices from the Ground: Reactions Pour In
Social media erupts with videos, jokes about "bald men beware," and debates on culling ethics. Forums like Reddit's r/singapore and HardwareZone buzz with sightings; some don hats preemptively, others decry shooting as cruel. Businesses report minimal disruption but worry over prolonged nesting.
Stakeholders diverge: residents prioritize safety, animal lovers push sterilization research, authorities stress invasiveness.
Practical Prevention: Stay Safe
Empower yourself against dives:
- Scan for circling crows or nests before walking.
- Wear hats, helmets, or carry umbrellas.
- Avoid lingering near attack zones; walk briskly.
- Report persistent issues to Animal Response Centre: 1800-476-1600.
- Never feed crows—fines up to $10,000 under Wildlife Act.

Ripple Effects on Daily Life and Economy
While Chinatown shops shrug off minor scares, repeated incidents erode comfort in public spaces. Elderly frequenters—prime victims—alter routines, heightening vulnerability. Tourism dips imperceptibly, but unchecked growth risks hawker hygiene woes from droppings.
Economically, pest control costs NParks millions yearly; shooting adds logistics but promises relief.
Ecological Stakes and Alternatives
As invasives, house crows prey on natives, skewing biodiversity. Solutions beyond lethal: laser deterrents, egg oiling (sterilizes embryos), AI-monitored traps. Research into immunocontraceptives offers humane long-term hope, though scalability lags.
CNA covers the policy shift, highlighting balanced management.
Photo by Angelyn Sanjorjo on Unsplash
Outlook: Taming the Skies
Chinatown's crows signal urgency: sustained NParks action, public vigilance, and innovation could stabilize numbers. Monitoring breeding hotspots and food sources remains key. For now, balding men—and all—tread warily in this avian hotspot, a reminder of urban wildlife's delicate balance.




