The world has gone into a lockdown ever since the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) broke out last December. As humans have been forced into confinement in their homes, wild animals have been seen entering human habitations, even big cities. Like the famous deer of Nara, Japan, who trooped into the town's streets after being unfed as there were no tourists to do so. Photo: @Johnny_suputama / Twitter Another instance was the equally famous monkeys of Lopburi town in Thailand. Usually fed by tourists at this time of the year, a lack of visitors caused monkey ‘street gangs’ to quarrel over a pot of yoghurt in late March. Photo: @sibungwen / TwitterIn Kerala, a common Indian civet, a creature of the night, was videographed on the streets of Kozhikode during the lockdown. Photo: @vegannutrition1 / TwitterIn the quiet, seaside town of Llandudno, Wales, a small herd of wild goats that normally roam nearby rocky hillsides, ventured into the town to feed on hedges and rest in grassy areas. Photo: @accountable_gov / Twitter A leopard appeared all of a sudden in an empty 900-acre Bihta air base, 40 kilometres southwest of Patna. It appeared to have wandered from the Kaimur hills, some 250 kilometres southwest of the city. Photo: C K ManojNilgai antelope appeared in wheat fields of Bakhtiarpur and Bhojpur in Bihar even as farmers were not harvesting their crop due to the lockdown. Photo: C K ManojIn Barcelona, Catalonia, wild boar were seen on the streets of the city. Spain has been among the three worst-affected countries due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Photo: @alfonslopeztena / TwitterA lion pride was photographed sleeping on a road in South Africa’s Kruger National Park without any tourists to disturb them as the country is in the middle of a lockdown due to COVID-19. Photo: @SANParksKNP / Twitter