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Rookery
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Rookery
The Rooks Have Come Back Again, Alexei Savrasov, 1871, canvas, oil, The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow
Colonies of Indian yellow-nosed albatrosses on Amsterdam Island
Fur seals in a rookery in the Pribilof Islands in the 1950s.

A rookery is a colony of breeding rooks, and more broadly a colony of several types of breeding animals, generally gregarious[1] birds.[2]

Coming from the nesting habits of rooks, the term is used for corvids and the breeding grounds[3] of colony-forming seabirds, marine mammals (true seals or sea lions), and even some turtles. Rooks (northern-European and central-Asian members of the crow family) have multiple nests in prominent colonies at the tops of trees.[4] Paleontological evidence points to the existence of rookery-like colonies in the pterosaur Pterodaustro.[5]

The term rookery was also borrowed as a name for dense slum housing in nineteenth-century cities, especially in London.[6]

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