This is how dozens of storks built their nests after returning home to find the trees had been replaced with mobile phone towers.<br /><br />The birds had lived for decades in the woodland next to Songkhla Zoo lake in southern Thailand. <br /><br />But they flocked to a neighboring region when the zoo built a new lake and walkway, leading to the destruction of their natural homes.<br /><br />Footage from last Friday (Jan 17) morning shows how the majestic birds had returned hoping to take up nesting in their old forests. <br /><br />But they were forced into the 99ft high metal mobile phone communication towers, where they could be seen making beds of straw.<br /><br />The zoo's conservation department said staff will give the storks raw fish in the morning and start planning to produce a wooden bird nesting cottage for them to live in.<br /><br />They said: "At first the storks have to become familiar with staff, then we will build the floating cottage for them to live naturally in the outdoor area. <br /><br />"Moreover, we would like to use them to be one of the attraction points in the zoo."