Portions of the expedition will be told within this blog. Download E.O. Wilson's Life on Earth for free from iBooks to see how last year's expedition was incorporated into the book.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Fool's gold

Chitengo Camp, Gorongosa National Park
Yesterday, one of our activities involved investigating the local Chinese gold mining operation outside of the town Vila Gorongosa.  The local operation holds great significance to Gorongosa National Park because it is being conducted in the buffer zone between the Park and Mt. Gorongosa.  The protected land on the mountain is defined as everything above 700 meters.  An extremely important connection between Mt. Gorongosa and Gorongosa National Park below is the water.  The rivers and Lake Urema are fed from water starting on Mt. Gorongosa.  Whatever gets in the water in the buffer zone between these regions can end up in the Park below.

Greg, Liz, and I headed up in the smaller helicopter with pilot Claude.  It was a windy day and the flight was a little rougher than past trips out of camp.   We had word that much of the mining activity was not far up a dirt road that headed out of the small airport in Vila Gorongosa.  Having reached the small landing strip we headed up the road and could see the first series of ponds within the river.  African workers could be seen working in the water and on the banks as we passed over headed. 

The Chinese Regime is Africa’s largest trade partner.   Supposedly the group from China running the main mining operation has the concession to mine in the region.  However, there are some important questions that need to be defined regarding their ability to use heavy machinery, chemicals in the extraction process, and excavation within the river.  What is clear is that this activity is having drastic effects on the local hydrology.

I was sitting on the pilot’s side of the helicopter in order to get some photographs.  I shot with both a wide angle lens and a 100 – 400 mm lens to get different perspectives of the mines.  We were all amazed at how extensive the operation was.  The water below us was heavily disturbed and sections looked as if they had been chemically treated. 
It is well known that water sustains life.  The wildlife living within this watershed are reliant on the water exiting the mining region.  This water began pure on the upper reaches on Mt. Gorongosa.  The evidence shows from these photos that the water from the Mountain is clear no more.
It is possible the miners are also using cyanide extraction which is typically employed where fine-gold bearing rocks are found. Zinc is added to the mix to improve the extraction process.  The zinc is later removed with sulfuric acid.   Such a toxic brew should never be spewed into the watershed of Gorongosa.
I discovered that China recently became the lead producer of gold in the world.  South Africa had held this position for over 100 years.  Additionally, China is now purchasing major mines in South Africa.  China’s hunger grows and something must be done to prevent it from destroying Mozambique.
I took a late afternoon walk with Ed I began telling him some of the day’s story of the gold mines.  After a short description of what I observed he held up his hand and said “I have heard enough.”  From his experience he knows the utter devastation this operation could cause. 
Returning to the Chitengo dining area I gave Greg Carr digital copies of the photos I took.  He was ready and eager to send them off to government officials.  It was satisfying to hear Greg say “Thanks – these photos could save the Park.”  Let’s hope so.

Community-based conservation

Chitengo Camp, Gorongosa National Park
One of the highlights of the expedition to date was our trip to the local village Vinho.  Morgan, Liz, Greg, and I were led by Castro down the road from Chitengo to the Pungue River for our crossing.  On the way we joked about the about the two local village names Vinho (wine) and Bebeda (drunk).  After some talk with locals we discovered that Bebeda is actually Sena for “bite.”   This origin of the name was connected to past Hippo wanderings into the community from the river.  Few realize that the hippos take more human lives in Africa than any of the other megafauna.  After hearing of the “bite” story we then speculated a clever Portuguese adventure may have given Vinho its name following Bebeda. Morgan suggested we should investigate further and I agreed.
Arriving at the river we found the boatman with his craft and a long bamboo pole to be used to “punt” across the river.  Even though we were in the dry season there was still good flow in the Pungue and the boatman navigated cleanly across the current.  Local women just wearing skirts were washing their clothes on some rocks along the shore in a timeless scene.

Walking to the village behind a few women bearing large loads of laundry balanced on their heads took us through large crops of maize and some beans.  Many of the residents of the community work in the Park and would greet Greg with an enthusiastic “Boa tarde Senhor Gregy!” (good afternoon) and warm laughter as we passed.  It is continually made clear how Greg’s vision of developing community support, financial enterprise and good spirits has made wildlife recovery and habitat restoration in Gorongosa possible.  This reminded me of young Jane Goodall and her early work in Gombe, Tanzania.   Since she was not allowed to travel alone as a young woman, her mother escorted on her first expedition.  Eventually, her mother established a small infirmary nearby the chimp study site which allowed Jane to gain great acceptance and support with the local community.  A healthy ecosystem requires all components to be working in a fine balance.

One of the first community development projects we came to was the health clinic established by the Carr Foundation.  We spoke to the nurse and discovered 51 patients had been treated so far during the day. Of those patients 5 were for malaria.  Visiting travelers from outside of Sub-Saharan Africa have the advantage of being able to take prophylactics like Malarone or Doxycycline in order to prevent infection by the mosquito-borne parasite Plasmodium.  Everyone else needs a vaccine.  The world needs to know a vaccine is necessary.  Unfortunately, 25% of the Mozambique population has malaria.  Pregrant women and children under 5 are hit the hardest. Whoever is reading this please do what you can to support vaccine development or other medical research for malaria eradication. 

Education is another enormous problem that needs to be addressed throughout Mozambique.  Locally, education stops terminates in the 5th grade.  This is tragic.  The new school we saw in Vinho is one huge step forward.  We met a range of kids near the school and fell in love with their resourcefulness with the bamboo push cars they had made.   Thanks to community-based efforts in supporting education these kids have a chance to do something good for their community, for Gorongosa, and for Mozambique.

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Local knowledge

Explore Gorongosa Camp, Gorongosa National Park, Mozambique
Woke to heavy cloud cover and some wind.  Most other days made me compare the Mozambican winter with late Spring in San Diego.  Pleasant days with cool nights.  Sitting by the campfire as the morning bird sounds rose around us I asked the guide Jeff about rain.   The question was passed to Jinga, the scout, and he took a quick glance around and said “Tempo moron”, or warm weather.  Not cool enough for rain at the moment.  Once more this pointed out the importance of local knowledge, something I have heard again and again from Greg Carr.  It has been mentioned here that many outside experts are in the Park at this time, but they are not rooted in this place.  Most of the local Bantu DNA goes back nearly 2,000 years.

After a coffee preto by the campfire it was time to head out along the Msicadzi River with Jeff and Jinga.   Jeff had his field glasses for birds and Jinga his bolt-action rifle for larger animals.  The grass was high and the weather was possibly warm of enough for snakes so most our time was spent on trails or the sterile soda pan along the upper river bank.  Since many of the animals we hope to see will startle easy, quiet feet were important.  It was a hunt, but the telescoping lens strapped to my side was a Canon 100-400 mm for the documentation of life not the destruction.
We surprised some solitary bushbuck and impala in the high grass.  It is the dry season, but there is plenty of vegetation for them here.  Also good places for predators to hide.

Along the Msicsdzi are deep channels running down the river bank to the water’s edge.  These are the entry and exit points of crocodiles and hippos.  There is not enough water for hippos here but we come upon tracks of crocs up above the channels.  While searching the river vegetation for birdlife we also scan the brush above to make sure we won’t surprise a croc.    The tracks of the largest reptile in the world stand out from all other in the region.  The scale-like pattern looks more like a portion of Japanese fishprint than animal footprint.  The tracks so high above the water make us more vigilant as we move through the dense forest growth.  Several large crocs are spotted along the water’s edge but they quickly slide in and disappear into the brown opaque water.  Incredible how such a large animal can be lost from sight in seconds.  We skirt the water’s edge but maintain some distance from this reptiles that are known to run 35 miles per hour.

Some of the more spectacular birds along the thickets and forest undergrowth are the small Peter’s Twinspot.  The belly has white spots on black that remind one of the back of a barbet.  They are elusive but manage to see a few deep inside some brush.

Sitting along the bank I spotted a flash or large brown wings.  The white head cleared some brush and I can see it is a fish eagle, with a fish in its talons.  The river teems with catfish which also sustain the crocodiles.  Wonder if these predators have ever met while going for the same fish.
Returning to camp Jeff gave an exclamation pointed to his side as a dark slender shiny dark-green body shot through the grass.  A startled cuckoo bird shot from the grass.  “Maybe a Green Mamba” Jeff said.  We followed it as it raced through the dry straw.  We poked with a stick and searched a stand of grass below some trees it disappeared into.  “Must have found its hole” he said.  The speed of the snake was impressive.  The venom is even more impressive.

In the afternoon we were back at Camp Chitengo.  We found Ed writing his piece for National Geographic.  The article with his words and Joel Sartore’s photos will be magical.  Ed seemed in good spirits, but his voice was hoarse from delivering so much on camera.  
A gratifying and quite interesting moment came when I sat down with Ed to have a ceverzha and to show him a high definition video clip I shot that day.  It was an ant video of course.  The termite raiding hissing ants have grabbed my attention more than any other animal so far.  They form tight columns as they travel together like a very organized army marching across the forest floor.  They are also quite large – nearly a centimeter in length.  I have noticed the ants can detect one’s breath if sitting too close.  They sense the carbon dioxide.  Once they sense the breath they will scatter out of formation.  I showed Ed the footage on a wide screen laptop which was shot with a macro lens bringing the ants in to fill the frame as they marched into their hole in the foreground.  At one point they scattered out of formation and Ed scooted back thinking he breathed on them.  We looked at each other and laughed.   I’ll take this as a sign.   If we can continue to produce this kind of content for the Life on Earth project and create a visual that can trick the world’s authority, then we will have accomplished something.

Unnaturalist

Jay and Ed are naturalists. When they walk down a lighted path, they reach into the lamps and pull out beasts without interrupting their conversation. Jay puts a lot of things into baggies he always has with him. Ed puts things into the right front pocket of his jacket. Me, not so much. There is a scrollwork sign over the library at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory that says "Study nature, not books." As a magazine editor and textbook cobbler, my fieldwork is in the library and online. My specimens are scientific reports and conversations with scientists who tell me whose work is sound and who is walking off the dock. I'm sheepish about the sign at CSHL but luckily I don't get there that often.

Which brings us to the baboon spider.


Jay posted this picture of the baboon spider yesterday. He has more pictures on his drive that I would post now but Jay and Greg are out in the helicopter this morning investigating gold-poaching miners who are burrowing in the buffer zone where they don't belong. We made the acquaintance of the baboon spider when Jeff, our guide, teased it out of its hole with a bit of stalk. When the critter grabbed the stalk, Jeff tried to ease it out of the hole and the spider tried to ease Jeff into the hole and they ended up at a standoff with the eerie schrecklichkeiter half in half out.

My plan for this trip has been to do what Ed does when he sees a crawling thing. He picks it up and caresses it, admires its attire, maybe puts it in his pocket. So I had my chance with the baboon spider. It was offering a paw and I could have just pinched it by the paw and plucked it out. I'm told that if it completely forgets itself and chomps on me that it feels like two bee stings. Reading a first-draft manuscript feels like two bee stings so I can handle that. But I didn't pull it out. Because it was Thursday, and Thursday is the wrong day to pull monsters out of their caves.

So I'm overdue by about one career for getting into the field. Last night Ed taught us the two ways an Alabama boy catches poisonous snakes. There is a vervet monkey a few feet behind Bailey's head. We're going into the teeming rain forest on the mountain tomorrow.





Friday, July 29, 2011

Exploring Gorongosa and Life on Earth

July 28
Explore Gorongosa Camp, Gorongosa National Park, Mozambique
The camp at Explore Gorongosa sits along a serpentine river bed that draws in an incredible array of birds. antelope, primates, and enormous crocodiles. This experience showed us another side to Gorongosa National Park.  We had spent most of our time in the dry savanna and now we had the chance to experience some very different bird life.  Our day began with Scottish­­-South African-Zimbabwean guide Jeff  who took us on a foot safari around the camp along with a Jinga an armed scout (askari) with the Park.  
Ed Wilson returned to Chitengo last night.  I made the trip with him which turned into a nice night game drive.  We didn’t see a whole lot but did come across some oribi, bush pig, and several African hare.   The cool night air in the open land cruiser topped off our fireside meal at the Explore Gorongosa Camp.
The morning walk with our Life on Earth team sans Ed, began with a baboon spider rising from its pit trap.  We realized one could spend a lifetime studying the variety of strategies predators use in such a biodiverse place.  The baboon spider is known as a trap-door spider that creates a silk-lined burrow dug with its pedipalps, chelicerae, and fangs.  Most of the world knows them as tarantulas but in the bush of Africa they are called the baboon spider.  Hairy like the local primates? This must be the connection.  This nocturnal sit-and-wait predator was coaxed out of his burrow with a stick of dried grass.   They normally ambush their prey and drag them below.  Fortunately, our guide Jeff was not taken below.

During lunch we discovered an African Scops Owl watching over.  They are usually found out in South African forests and here we were with our nocturnal friend snoozing on a branch above our table.  He/she would occasionally open an eye to see what was happening and then nod off again.  The feather color and pattern blended perfectly with the surrounding bark.  The stories of evolutionary adaptation in plants and animals are endless here.  Lots to share for Life on Earth.
Bird activity around camp is incredibly diverse.  It is quite obvious why this location is such a top draw for birders. The lapwings and forest guinea fowl forage along the streambed.  Yellow-billed storks sit high in the trees.  Twin spots flit on low branches and drop to the leaf litter.     Several kingfishers (brown-headed, grey-headed, and pygmy) perch on extended branches looking for prey below in the water or grass.   The fish eagle soars down from a high perch and returns with a catfish.  This is Gorongosa.

The afternoon took us out to the floodplain searching for more animals for story ideas, biology content, and the  Encyclopedia of Life Gorongosa Field Guide.  We once again saw lots of Waterbuck.    They have definitely been the most prolific antelope in the region.  It will be interesting to discover why this particular species is so successful in the region.
We took a walk in a clear swath surrounded by tall grass just as the sun was setting.  The armed Jinga walked ahead of us as we were walking to locate Cape Buffalo.  We found some buffalo dung in the area but no buffalo.   The Reedbuck below was spotted nearby in the last light of the fading day.
Late dusk brought nightjar birds soaring and diving for insects flying near us.  Some crowned-cranes sounded their waelful call and flew into the fading sunlight to find a roost for the night.  Driving back to camp didn’t show much except Impala, Oribi, Waterbuck, and a few Swamp Mongeese we watched foraging along the shore.
The evening held another wonderful feast by our camp hosts at Explore Gorongosa.  Rob, Claire, Neil, Jeff, and Kathy made sure we were all taken care of.  Toasts were made for the future of Africa and Life on Earth.  Cheers.  


Thursday, July 28, 2011

Sex, symbiosis, and serenity

Chitengo Camp, Gorongosa, Mozambique

Today was a big production day.  I knew Ed Wilson was an amazing naturalist and science teacher, seeing him deliver educational content on camera, in the field, is truly remarkable.  His 42 years of teaching biology at Harvard show through every day here.  Each 2 to 5 minute sequence has been a single take.  It is remarkable.  I am sure a director’s dream.  Award-winning director Jessica Wu has been very happy and it has been quite amazing to watch them work together along with Nat Geo film master Bob Poole.  Bob will be with us next week as well and it should allow us to continue to build rich, informative and beautiful content for Life on Earth.  As good as it gets really.  The team here is amazing.
The other powerful dynamic is the people of Chitengo.  The collection of scientists from various parts of the world pursuing many different scientific endeavors is incredible.   Ecologists, hydrologists, veterinary scientists, zoologists, vegetation specialists… the list goes on.  It is a thriving field station with wonderful conditions for eco-tourists as well. Additionally we have a mix of media professionals documenting Ed’s visit and components of this place.  Very stimulating. 
Took a short walk to the river just 2 km from camp.  Nice forest growth along the way but not much wildlife.  The soccer match on the return was quite eventful.  One camp vs another.  Greg Carr told us of an annual game between the local village and the Chitengo Camp crew.  The spoils of victory?  Two chickens to the victor.  Greg said one year the village team had a one-legged soccer player.  Evidently he lost one to a crocodile.

Rob Pringle has also been inspiring.  He is a young professor from Princeton who was one of Paul Ehrlich’s last graduate students.  Rob has been doing a variety of successful ecology projects in  Kenya and Greg has asked him to bring his expertise to Chitengo.  He now serves on the board of the Gorongosa restoration project.
After making the butterfly nets from collected poacher’s materials, I discovered a new story that we are just developing.  Talking to Carlos, the resident vet and Matteus, the district official in charge of the Park I found out that these donated mosquito nets have some serious ecological issues surrounding them.  Carlos mentioned that recently 200,000 nets were donate to Mozambique via USaid.  These bed nets are treated with an insecticide which is safe for humans but toxic for insects and aquatic wildlife.   The fact that local residents are using the nets for poaching fish is bad enough, but Carlos believes the release of the chemical into the water is incredibly devastating.  He has found local ponds that appear to be sterile.   This relief program needs to be complete rethought. Additionally, the fishing with mosquito nets appears to be widespread issue as it also is happening in far away Uganda.   Unforeseen consequences of massive humanitarian aid.  
Ed’s stories today for the Life on Earth project were on the structure and function of the flower with an emphasis on the evolution of the design and the co-evolution of the animal pollinators.  The scene was symbolic as Ed presented in front of an impala lily in front of a portion of a wall that stood as a memorial to the war of independence in 1973.  He charismatically discussed the different aspects of sexual reproduction and nature of life from the perspective of the flower.

The following shots were out on the edge of Lake Urema in an iconic savannah setting.  The continuation of the termite mound ecological succession was told and a termite colony was excavated.  Much of this was for the description of symbiosis, known as “living together.”  The Macrotermes termites that construct the massive mounds also garden a particular species of fungus which they feed off of.  The design is elaborate and the benefits of this community show a clear mutualistic form of symbiosis.  
Ed also discussed some of the social structure of the local yellow baboons and the parallel complex social organization with the termite colony.  It was simple, beautiful and will be a great contribution to the upcoming online textbook.   The place was also ideal for the discussion of the savannah and its role in the evolution of hominids.   Another perfect day.
Just to top it all off our Life on Earth team headed to Explorer Gorongosa Camp within the Park.  We arrived to a scene from safari life from Out of Africa.  Large manyara tents were set up along trails lit by iconic hurricane lamps. The soft glow of the flame in the lamps took us back to another time.  What a beautiful place.  We will be here for two nights. 
Our hosts here are warm, friendly, and very knowledgeable of local flora and fauna.  More coming on the wonders of this place.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Jay's Revenge

In Jay's post below, he describes turning poacher haul into ploughshares. Jay conjured collection nets from confiscated snare wire and netting. He poached the scissors and stapler from the camp kitchen. Co-conspirators Bailey and Liz helped whip up the nets.














How did the equipment work? During the blitz the young biologists turned up 59 animal species in less than two hours. The guy below was the star of the day, earning the appreciative remark from Ed, "What the heck are you?"


Bioblitz on the Mountain

Chitengo Camp, GNP, Mozambique 
Today, was a day of biodiversity.  The bioblitz was on and there was definitely a biobuzz around camp.  Encyclopedia of Life recently announced our activities and had recognized the event under the Global Bioblitz. 
Prior to the helicopter flight up the mountain it was time to prepare some sampling gear.  A few days ago, Greg Carr mentioned they held confiscated material from poachers in a room next to a small jail cell.  The cache included muskets, snare wire, and netting from fish poachers.  I had been hoping to get some additional nets for the kids of Mt. Gorongosa to capture butterflies.  This was it  --  seized poacher’s snare wire and netting to survey insects for biodiversity and wildlife conservation.  Four nets were assembled and we were ready to go.  Resident vet and star of the Lost Eden Carlos Lopes Pereira assisted us in getting the material.

We left a little early for the bioblitz so we could see some hippo around the lake.  We saw lots of crocodiles and the abundant water bucks around the lake.   This growing waterbuck population for will be good for boosting predator populations. Such is the cycle of life in Gorongosa.   
On the way to the bioblitz we also had time to investigate some ponds on the upper mountain.   The scene was so incredibly pristine.  A wide open meadow set in the dense upper forest of Mt. Gorongosa.  At the lower end of the meadow were two beautiful crystal clear ponds.  We slowly approached and the pilot, Mr. Berges decided it wouldn’t support our weight so we had to lift off.  It was decided would have to come back another time with fewer people.  Hopefully, soon.  Ed figured this would be “an ideal area for a freshwater ecologist.  A dream.”  The ponds and streams below were so beautiful and pristine.
Next stop bioblitz.  Heading down the mountain we arrived across the stream near the tree nursery.  Lots of local Gorongosi were waiting.  After unloading, a few more nets were fashioned and the blitz was on.

The forestry workers had constructed a beautiful working space for Ed next to the stream.  They had made a bamboo shelter with planks over the rocks along the stream.   The plan: send out local school children to collect every animal in sight for classification by Ed.  The energy was powerful.  Barefoot local youth were moving through the high grass, diving into the thorn scrub and reaching into the stream.  Soon the bounty started to be set before Ed.   He carefully inspected each and every specimen with magnifying glass and sometimes a field guide.  Most specimens were compared from memory.  He then recorded the family or genus, and sometimes species of the insect (mostly) and then began with the next young naturalist.  It was incredible.  So much learning, exploration and discovery.  Dream realized.   This activity put everyone in touch with nature.   

Showing young Gorongosi boys the benefits of a butterfly nets was especially enjoyable.  I learned my first Gorongosi word,  “probeta” or butterfly.   We caught some beautiful specimens with the converted poacher’s materials. Ed was quite excited and hoped to bring these to a colleague at Harvard.  

Some of the experience reminded me of the descriptions of Ricketts and Steinbeck in the Sea of Cortez with the assistance of local children.  While collecting within the intertidal of the region they often had support of Seri Indian children who enthusiastically turned over rocks and probed the region for a variety of intertidal species.  Today was much of the same, but most our youth had a ziplock bag in their hand.
Flying home we all had a wonderful feeling of the event.  Ed described it as “historic.”
The afternoon was scheduled for the Gorongosa Eduation Center.  This is something we had been looking forward to the whole trip.  The center had a group of 25-30 local teachers who were in attendance for an environmental education training workshop.  Ed gave a great talk about the importance of education, the importance of biology/biodiversity and some of the importance behind his work with ants.  The group was especially interested in the work with ants.  It was a challenging talk as the was intermittent with translation to Portuguese and the cultural differences led to difficulty interpreting their reactions.  After he spoke I gave a short talk to the teachers about my work and approaches to biodiversity education and project-based learning.  I hope to return in a few days to meet with these teachers once again.

At dinner time everyone was still riding high after the very successful bioblitz on the mountain.  Great that it was all documented by the Nat Geo crew as many others will have the chance to experience this wonderful event.  It inspired everyone involved.  The energetic youth exploring the region gave us additional hope for the preservation of the beautiful mountain, and for the recovery of its wildlife.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

The big Bell is a great way to get around Gorongosa, but the parking is impossible.





A day of blessing

Each person attending the ceremony drank from the cup of wine and then was given their own cigarette.  Most likely the non-Gorongosi people attending the blessing hadn’t experienced this before.  We were part of something quite foreign but connected to the prosperity of our project.  This was day of ritual and preparation for our biological survey of the mountain.
Yesterday, was about identifying a good location for an upcoming bioblitz.  A bioblitz is an intensive biological survey of a particular place.  The first one was done with Ed Wilson at Walden Pond  and they have since been conducted around the world.  They expose many non-biologists to the world of nature.   They teach participants about the importance of biodiversity.  They make everyone a kid again exploring the dirt, leaves and pond water.  Fundamentally, a bioblitz connects us with the living world around us and conducting this survey of biodiversity.
Tomorrow, we will head back up to Mt. Gorongosa – a 2-hour drive or a 15-minute helicopter ride from from Camp Chitengo to conduct a bioblitz with local Gorongosi kids on the mountain and students from the Gorongosa Education Center. Before the survey could happen on the mountain it was important that local officials and elders would bless the activity.  An early morning trip took some camp educators, Life on Earth team members, and the National Geographic crew to a small community at the base of the mountain.  As we arrived some pigs and piglets, and chickens scattered about.  Initially, each member needed to remove their shoes and walk across the dirt and animal dung yard.  Females were sent to one bamboo mat on the floor and the men to another.   Some community elders started the blessing in a closet sized shrine facing the seated crowd.   Some words were said and wine was poured.  A young man circulated a small tin cup of wine on a saucer to each person on the ground.  This was followed by the same man solemnly circulating the seated participants with a single cigarette.  There was a short dance and clapping and then an abrupt end.  It was later discovered through our park friends that a woman had died yesterday in the village and they couldn’t continue the celebration of the mountain for a longer time because of their grieving.

We moved on to the next planned blessing up the mountain to the waterfall site that was visited yesterday.  On the way every kid around came out to visit us with a smile, wave and a big “Ola!” all in unison.  We climbed the rutted, steep road crossing through banana, papaya, and pineapple fields.  Climbing higher we came upon some beautiful flat-top acacia trees not far from where the bioblitz will be held.    
The ceremony was located around one particular tree within a beautiful grove up on the bluff.  There was a crowd of 150-200 community members of all ages.  Joel the Nat Geo photographer commented that every mature girl had a child except for maybe 2.  Sadly, the average lifespan of a Mozambican woman is 40-42 years old.

Much of the ceremony was centered around 3 district officials called “Regulos” who came together for the first time for this event.   Each had their uniform.  One had a cowboy hat a something like a army soldier sweater and another had Khadahfi-style general’s uniform.
The ceremony started with Greg Carr giving some introductory words in Portuguese adapted from Krishnamurti:
“We watch this tree every day. As the sun rises slowly over the horizon, over the trees, this particular tree becomes all of a sudden golden. All of the leaves are bright with life, and as you watch them, the hours pass by.”
Tsonga translated this into Gorongosi for the main group attending.
Each day I have been trying to use more of my Portuguese but found high up on the mountain that most spoke their local language, Gorongosi.  Throughout our visit we met some wonderful warm people. 

We visited the streambed again which was quite active with locals bathing and getting water.  The were many insects in the water and I also collected some tadpoles.  It is possible we could find some new species on the mountain.

A goat was killed for the event and a feast of rice, beans and goat meat.  In a sense this was payback.  Recently some mountain dwellers had brought goats to the upper reaches of Gorongosa.  Their habits are notoriously destructive for native vegetation.   This was one solution to the problem.  Eat them.


Monday, July 25, 2011

Visualization and seeing

One of the things that drives the textbook team is the newly tappable potential of scientific visualization. When Gael McGill and Drew Berry and their teams square off at their workstations, they're booting up a billion bucks in software research and development spent by Hollywood studios to populate Hogwarts and Middle Earth. We're using the Hollywood stuff to make biologists. We want kids to see what we're making for them, but what we really want is for them to see what Ed sees when he's outdoors. There are different ways of seeing. When Ed peels a blossom, he sees how the pistil and stamen were sculpted by the pollinating insect, and how the insect was sculpted by competition for the flower. He sees how they serve each other and how both serve the grazers that serve the predators.
We'll make a visualization of those connections, but the real goal is to make connections in the synaptic jangle of young brains so that when they walk around outside, they'll see what Ed sees.
This morning Ed hopped over the wire to explore in dry, dusty grass. He didn't find a single ant. Conclusion? Rainy season must come hard here. Ants are the boss of the world, but they're fussy about flooding. Obvious if you know how to look.

Walkabout

Chitengo Camp is surrounded by security wire because some of the passersby are lions and elephants, which can present a problem for people and buildings. No one would give Ed a disapproving look or a murmur, but when we got in late yesterday, there was mention that Ed had given the wire less respect than usual for a person walking past alone with a net to collect bugs.
One could imagine it working out OK if the big animals dropped by. "Is it really your first sub-Saharan visit, Ed?" "Yes it is, east enders of the Rift Valley." That could happen.
The solution, obviously. is a spotter to keep an eye out for Ed while Ed cracks stems and everts blossoms to find privacy-seeking insects. We'll probably be competing for the job soon.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Day of discoveries

Chitengo Camp, Gorongosa National Park, Mozambique

Where to start?  Possibly it would be a reflection of a safari with Ed Wilson, his first.  Maybe the talk with the breakthrough discoveries of the archaeologists from Calgary.  Or possibly the helicopter ride and pilot bioblitz to Gorongosa.  
The day actually started by bringing a few specimens to Ed for identification.   Prepping for our upcoming bioblitz and the running entertainment for a camp full of biologists and national geographic crew has been to collect insects and bring them to Ed.  After shining my light out on the grass last night, and see the glowing eyes low in the grass, I knew I had it.  A wolf spider.   Additionally just along the trail light outside my hut, I collected a large winged-insect with massive jaws.  Bringing these to Ed in the morning was extra exciting since the winged beast was a male driver ant.  This was the first driver ant Ed had seen.  I then remembered last year, in Ed’s office at Harvard he showed me a sketch of driver ants in a book of his with a sketch of a tribesman and he asked if I thought the man could have been Maasai.   Incredible to be sitting here now finding these animals with him.  

Monster Gorongosa Ant Lion (5 mm)


It is hard to describe the energy with the crew regarding the morning safari.  This would be the first for the world’s greatest naturalist.   Our group included Ed Wilson, Greg Carr, Rob Pringle, and Mark Stahlman.  Rob is a biology professor at Princeton and Mark is a scientist from South Africa who does lots of work in Gorongosa.  The National Geographic crew road in Bob Poole’s personal Land Rover that was customized by shooting wildlife with a turret-mount above for video and a detachable side panel.  Serious photography.  Shortly outside of the camp we had the good fortune to find some hissing termite raiding ants crossing the road.  These were some of the largest ants I have ever seen.  Their movement was of a very confident army moving across the land undeterred by anything.  Getting close to them the hissing sound they collectively produced was incredible.  The video was fantastic, but unfortunately can’t be loaded here.  Ed was clearly in his element.

A lot of the Nat Geo production involves Ed with a local Mozambique the biologist in-training Tsonga.   Ed and Tsonga created a great team with Ed showing him techniques for collecting and identifying insects. Tsonga would share the local natural history of certain species.  It is important to remember this is Ed’s first trip to sub-Saharan Africa. 

We spent a fair amount of time telling the story of the succession of the termite mound.  Fundamentally, these highly specialized social insects construct a massive earthen tower in the savannah.   After the termites die off the mound soon becomes inhabited by a variety of small mammals. The initial vegetation begins with grasses and shrubs.  The former termite colony has left behind a super nutrient rich deposit.  Eventually large trees become the climax plant community in the mound.  Burrowing animals take over the mound and when the trees die off the mound is reduced to a depression that can become a shallow pan for water.

After lunch we headed for a science talk from the University of Calgary archaeologists.  We had heard of their work up in the limestone caves and their search for stone tools in the region.  The presentation was given by the principal investigator, Julio Mercader. Little did we know of the significance of what was ahead.  The group has been working in a local cave called Cheringoma.  The region is the southern tip of the Rift Valley which runs 4,000 miles to the north to Ethiopia.  The very active plate tectonics in the Rift have led to continual renewable of landscape, creating the very diverse geography in the region.   Mercader reported their findings included Iron Age (2,000 ya), Stone Age (30,000 ya), and Middle Stone Age (300,000 ya).   They also informed us of the challenges they have faced from a variety of onslaughts including:  limestone collected for cement, rocks collected for roadwork, and bat guano collected for fertilizer.  All of which has caused the devastation of several rich sites in and around the limestone caves.   The good news came from an initial trench dug by this team in front of the Cheringoma Cave.  Finds included hominid bones which they estimate between 1.9 to 2.6 million years ago!  This is somewhere between the genus Homo and Australopitechus.  This would be the first Australopithocene finds in the country of Mozambique.  This is incredible news for Gorongosa National Park, for Mozambique and for a better understanding of who we are and where we came from.  

After the news from the caves it was time for a pilot bioblitz on Mt. Gorongosa.  Greg, Ed, Mark,  Andrew from Nat Geo, and I flew in the larger helicopter to a site on the eastern edge of the mountain where Gorongosa National Park forestry workers have been cultivating a variety of native trees and replanting.  This year they will have replanted one million trees!  The workers performed a dance and welcoming cheer for Greg’s arrival.  After searching for insects with Ed for a while, the findings were slim.  We had been collecting on a magnificent grassy flat of the bluff above a large waterfall.  This is situated just below the rainforest on the mountain. We started to find more life as we headed down to a stream.  Mark commented on the low nutrient quality of the soil in the region as a possible cause for low abundance.   I captured a dragon fly and found more flying insects near the stream.  This will most likely be the spot for the bioblitz in a few days.

Slash and burn agriculture seen on Mt. Gorongosa.


We had another incredible flight back to camp.  We were filmed by the second helicopter most of the way.  It will be interesting to see how this footage is used for future Nat Geo productions.

What a day. 

Morgan Ryan, project manager of Life on Earth arrived in the afternoon with his daughter Bailey and follows with his report.

Morgan and Bailey arrive

Bailey and I flew North Carolina to JFK to Johannesburg (15-hour leg!) to Beira and the trip wasn't 10 percent as tough as we had feared. We stayed up all night Friday night, cabbed to the plane, and half slept all the way there. Never slept all the way, but got to spend half the trip elsewhere. When Bailey is in her hibernating posture she can do the trick of rolling in the seat until her feet are pointing at the luggage bin. I can't.

Vasco and Claude met us at Beira this afternoon, we signed the guest book in the visa office and jumped on the little helicopter. Shock number one. Gorongosa is a great deal huger than I thought.

We arrived at Chitengo as everyone else was leaving for another bout of Ed's Hot Streak. The original schedule was tight. Then we loosened up and decided to play the first few days by ear and plan textbook lesson as we went. Then Ed arrived with Jay and started pouring out lessons on camera and the textbook shoot jumped off the starting line. I missed day one and two. Bailey and I arrived in the little helicopter today just as the Ed crew was heading back out in the big helicopter.

Macadona offered us a spin in a safari truck until they came back, so we climbed up and went for a look around. As it happens, someone told the lions that Bailey was coming. Macadona hadn't seen them at the once-upon-a-time legendary Lion House in years.











They said, "What's up, Piedmont Flats?" We said, "What's up, lions?"

Then Bailey fell asleep on the ride home and it seems like I better get some sleep too.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Soaring to Chitengo

Chitengo Camp, Gorongosa National Park, Mozambique
The helicopter flight in to camp brought us right into the National Geographic Lost Eden film.  We recognized some animals and landmarks and had to pinch ourselves because we knew this was the real thing.  We had made it. The sounds of the metropolis were behind us and just the insects and birds of Camp Chitengo surrounded us.  

The day began with a private charter flight from Lanseria Airport in Northern Johannesburg.  The fires were up again as we made it to the outskirts of the city.  A very friendly pilot, James met us at check-in and we sped through the small airport with ease compared to leaving from the large international commercial airport.  Good conversation and beautiful landscapes entertained us as the flight took us over Kruger National Park and up along the coast of Mozambique to the city of Beira.  We flew over the large estuary of the Pungwe River. 

We spoke of true explorers and I thought of the legendary Scottish explorer David Livingstone who began his trans-African journey in Mozambique - from the mouth of the Zambezi River, not far north of our current destination.   He traveled up the Zambezi in the 1850s and made it across the continent to what is now known as Angola on the Atlantic.  In order to return his traveling companions from Mozambique to their homeland, he then amazingly retraced his path back across Africa.  His last journey made famous by his encounter with Henry M. Stanley, who found him ill and starving, was focused on finding the source of the Nile River. 
Ed recounted his experiences in Papua New Guinea nearly 60 years ago and his expedition to explore the highlands.  He figured he was the first outsider to do so.  He collected numerous ants along the way and discovered a new species of frog.  Nice to be traveling with a true explorer.
At the Beira airport we were greeted by Greg Carr, our host and the vision, catalyst, and spirit behind the rebirth of Gorongosa, and Vasco Galante, director of PR with Gorongosa and a true man of action.  Both were possibly as excited as we were regarding our arrival.  It felt wonderful to step on Mozambican soil after planning and anticipating this trip for so long. We also met a couple from Boston who are setting up a resort within Gorongosa National Park.  This will be a major push for the future success of the region.  Greg pointed out the importance of the private-public partnership in the region to create the optimal outcome for biodiversity and the people of the region.  Ecotourism is a big part of the solution.  We also met up with Bob Poole the photographer behind Lost Eden who will be with us during the extent of our expedition.  He told us he had just driven in from Kenya – his homeland.
After introductions we were presented with a choice that may indicate the hospitality before us.  “Helicopter or plane?” Greg asked.  Nice question.  Ed would be traveling with Greg and the Nat Geo crew.  I sat up front to film in the second helicopter with Elizabeth and Nina, a biologist from Angola.  Pilot Claude gave us a great introduction to the region.  I have felt nothing closer to the take off of a bird then the forward moving lift off in a small helicopter – this rivaled past rides in the Dry Valleys of Antarctica the coastal rainforests of Kuaui. 

On the way out we passed over a progression of human alteration to the landscape which was easily viewed from our low-flying helicopter.  We donned our headsets and Claude pointed out slash and burn activity.  Small fires rose in every direction.  Most of the activity appeared to be charcoal production.  After clearing an area, the wood would be cut and the charcoal would be produced in long structures covered with earth – from the sky, looking like the earthen long-houses of an old Celtic community.  The scars of clearing were numerous.  We wondered what the ‘price’ of this forest sold for in Beira.  Claude informed us of the movement to cultivate cassava for food and biofuel.  This sounded like a decent solution to provide needed food and a more sustainable fuel.
Some of the other fires were possibly set by poachers.  The typical strategy is to set numerous snare traps and then start a brush fire to drive the animals in the waiting snares.   He pointed out the poachers use the river to transport the bushmeat to Beira where it is readily available because of the large amount poaching that is occuring. 
Shortly after crossing into the Park we spotted two small flatboats along the river bank with tarps holding nets.  These were most likely fish poachers.  Claude circled back around and I jotted down the GPS position (S 19 01 95, E 34 33 00) so rangers could be notified of their location. 

This was all an interesting introduction to the challenges facing Gorongosa regarding wildlife management.  The war is over, but the battle continues.
Flying over the Urema River, which exits the sprawling Lake Urema, we spotted numerous Hippopotamus  and Nile Crocodile.  Waterbucks were seemingly everywhere. Along the shores of Lake Urema we could see scores of enormous crocs launch into the war looking like warships headed to battle.

Soon we spotted an airstrip clearing amidst the forest and there was Camp Chitengo.  We landed and were filmed by producer Jessica Wu from Nat Geo and were greeted by Matteus and Tsonga who will be working with us in Gorongosa.   Soon Greg and Ed arrived with the film crew.   Vervet monkeys bounded around the ground and trees, and wart hogs rooted in the dirt along the road as we walked to our lodging. Just moments ago, I heard some snapping of branches outside my hut and watched several elephants slowly walk past just 50 meters away. Yes, we have arrived in Africa’s Lost Eden.