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HIDE AND SEEK
BBC Wildlife
|September 2023
The western lowland gorilla is not as familiar as its mountain cousin, but the forests of Central Africa are gradually revealing the secrets of this elusive ape
AT FIRST, I THOUGHT I WAS HALLUCINATING. But as I closed my eyes and concentrated every synapse I could muster, I could hear it. It was almost imperceptible through the whining drone of a million cicadas, but it was definitely there; a contented, low grunt surpassing in tone and resonance the deepest bass from any choir I'd ever listened to.
I peered into the gloom. Surrounding me was Marantaceae, a glossy, impenetrable mass of plant life that dominates the forest floor; above, most of the sky was obliterated by a tetris-like canopy of kapok, fig, ebony and Panda oleosa.
This was the Ndzehi Forest, in the northwestern reaches of the Republic of the Congo. A few metres ahead, my tracker, Zeferin, had turned from super-sensed ape-seeker to landscape gardener. Using his secateurs, he made a series of minor adjustments to our surroundings, bending a branch back here and clipping a leaf away there to free up just enough space for me to crouch down. A silent beckoning meant it was time to adorn my face mask; our quarry was close.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Andy Skillen has been a wildlife photographer and photojournalist for over 25 years, and has worked across the globe. @andyskillenphoto; faunavista.com
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September 2023-Ausgabe von BBC Wildlife.
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