8.06.2018

A Pocket of Paradise by Awake writer in Cote d'Ivoire - Teeming With Wildlife


Suddenly we hear the leaves rustling high above us.  The sound is caused by a large band of noisy Diana and mona monkeys.  They are screeching out their alarm calls and leaping from branch to branch. A mona monkey, with its comical white-streaked face, watches us as intently as we watch it!  Monkeys, chimpanzees, and birds thrive on the many fruits and nuts available in the tree canopy.  Onc can often observe monkeys and birds noisily feeding from the same tree.

There are 50 species of mammals found in Tai Park, and many of them are common to the region.  Buffalo and forest elephants live here as well as do bongos, bush pigs, duikers, giant forest hogs, leopards and pygmy hippopotamuses. Among the smaller animal residents are the civet cat, the golden cat, the forest genet, the mongoose, the pangolin, and the nocturnal galago. 

Our guide identifies many animal tracks, such as those of the duiker, a small antelope.  In the forest there are seven species of duikers, including the rare Jentink's,,  zebra and Ogilby's duikers.  We see tracks where giant forest hogs have foraged for roots,, and we inspect the habitat of the scaly, giant pangolin.,  and ant and termite eater.  A pair had dug themselves a large hole in the forest floor with two chambers.  These underground chambers are up to 130 feet [40 m] long and 15 feet [5 m] deep.  The pangolin feeds at night, roaming many miles and then returning home just before dawn. It rips open termite nests with its rakelike claws and uses its sticky tongue to attract the insects.

Our guide locates a band of chimpanzees that range in the eight-square-mile [20 sq km] area.  There are more than 2,000 chimpanzees in the park.  We had heard that they use stones or branches that they carry with them to crack nuts.  We are thrilled when we spot a chimp sitting on the forest floor about 20 feet [5 m] from us, banging away at a nutshell with a branch.

Next time: A Pocket of Paradise by Awake writer in Cote d'Ivoire - A Bird Watcher's Delight

From the jw.org publications

No comments:

Post a Comment

Thank you for your commment. Your comment will be reviewed for approval soon.

God Bless.