I n the dead of night, something stirs in the alleyways and empty lots between high-rises. Not criminals or vandals—but raccoons, coyotes, feral dogs, and entire colonies of rodents. Cities, once thought to be man-made ecosystems, are now revealing themselves as bustling habitats for wild animals adapting to the concrete jungle. But what happens when those wild neighbors cross paths with public safety, property damage, or disease? Enter drones—not as enforcers, but as silent