No sign marks the start of the trail to one of the last unspoiled habitats in all of Africa. I wouldn鈥檛 see it anyway. I鈥檓 crammed into an 11-passenger van carrying 13 people and a heap of backpacks as it navigates to that unmarked spot in a scientific reserve that sprawls across the southern end of Bioko, a mountainous tropical island 20 miles off the west coast of central Africa. A sweaty forearm is smashed against my sweaty shoulder. Three knees dig into my back through the thin seat. I鈥檓 not complaining鈥攖he porters behind me will lug our expedition鈥檚 gear for two days over 18 rugged miles into the Gran Caldera de Luba, a rainforest-blanketed volcanic crater whose 7,400-foot-high walls create a natural sanctuary for a dazzling array of wildlife. The few dozen people who make the arduous journey each year come mostly to survey monkeys. Our group is venturing into this primeval realm to document its far-lesser-known inhabitants, especially birds.
If we鈥檙e really, really lucky, I鈥檓 told, we鈥檒l spot the near-mythical Grey-necked Picathartes, a bird whose global population might number as few as 3,500 individuals. If we鈥檙e insanely lucky, we鈥檒l discover a new species.
Just outside Ureca, the only village on Bioko鈥檚 south coast, our driver stops on the brand-new road that bisects the 200-square-mile Gran Caldera de Luba Scientific Reserve. Sandal-clad porters scramble out, heft overstuffed backpacks, and disappear into the forest. The rest of us鈥攎e, four scientists, an Equatoguinean college student, and a photographer鈥攕lip on daypacks and follow two guides on a zigzagging eight-mile route through dense forest and along black-sand beach to Moraka, a field camp where a half-dozen volunteers monitor primates and nesting sea turtles each winter, and where we鈥檒l crash tonight. The forest trail is dotted with spent shotgun shells from bushmeat poachers who hunt monkeys, small antelope called duikers, and large birds such as Black-casqued Hornbills. Hunting is illegal in protected areas like this, but there鈥檚 scant manpower to enforce the bans. To get where hunters don鈥檛 go, a guide tells me, you need to suffer.
I understand what he means the next day as we gasp up the crater鈥檚 flank. The only sign of humans is the root-tangled trail leading 10 grueling miles up 4,000 feet in elevation gain. Equatoguineans, it seems, don鈥檛 believe in switchbacks. At our midway break, Luke L. Powell, 34, a conservation ecologist at the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center, barely seems winded; he鈥檇 popped a caffeine pill. Jacob C. Cooper, 24, a University of Kansas master鈥檚 student who recently modeled the range and distribution of nearly every hummingbird species in the world, has binoculars to his eyes and is calling out bird species. I can鈥檛 follow a word. (He鈥檚 speaking fast. In Latin.) Next to me, cursing his smoking habit, is Jared Wolfe, 35, a research ecologist with the U.S. Forest Service who studies the effects of climate change on birds. His fianc茅e (and the group鈥檚 mammal expert), Kristin Brzeski, 32, a conservation geneticist who studies coyotes at Princeton University, is doing yogic stretches.
It鈥檚 the crew鈥檚 first trip to the caldera, and Brzeski鈥檚 first year with the . The guys founded the group in 2013 to explore the understudied birdlife in Equatorial Guinea, a country that is home to precisely zero professional ornithologists. So far their annual expeditions on Bioko and the sliver of mainland between Cameroon and Gabon have added 11 names to the country鈥檚 avian list of roughly 400 species. They expect to turn up dozens more. They also aim to help boost conservation in this rapidly changing country, where oil riches are fueling booming development.
At last we crest the ridge, then drop down the vertiginous inner wall, grasping poles driven into the ground. At the bottom lies our last obstacle: the Ole River. The water traces an old lava flow, shooting out of the crater in a dramatic 75-foot waterfall and tumbling down to the ocean far below. It鈥檚 January, height of the dry season, so we boulder-hop across the thigh-high water to Hormigas Camp. From April through October, when there鈥檚 more than 30 feet of rain, the river swells immensely, blocking human access for most of the rainy season.
We use the last hour of sunlight to search for the legendary picathartes. Wolfe machetes a path to the waterfall, and six of us squeeze onto a dining-table鈥搒ize basalt outcrop, peering through binoculars across the 40-foot-wide abyss to the sheer rock wall beyond, where a primatologist saw the birds nesting last March.
鈥淗ow do their young fledge?鈥 marvels Wolfe.
鈥淔aith?鈥 Powell says.
The picathartes is largely a mystery. The bird is slender and gray with a vermilion cap, and walks in near-silence, hunting insects in the forests of Equatorial Guinea, Cameroon, Nigeria, and Gabon. When it does vocalize, it makes an un-birdy hiss, cough, or 鈥測ap of a Pekinese,鈥 as one observer described it. We hear grumpily squawking African Grey Parrots and chattering red colobus monkeys. Nothing pica-esque.
For eight days we鈥檒l explore this primordial place. Brzeski will deploy an army of motion-activated camera traps to document elusive wildlife. The crew will travel deep into the crater in search of birds, and be the first people to band in the caldera in a quarter-century. Such promise of discovery eases the disappointment of not seeing the picathartes tonight. 鈥淭hat would鈥檝e been too easy,鈥 says Powell. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got all week.鈥
Equatorial Guinea is the kind of place biologists go gaga over. Its mainland jungles boast rare animals like picathartes, chimpanzees, elephants, and gorillas. Bioko is even more intriguing. Islands aren鈥檛 usually flush with primates or forest birds, which are unlikely to cross open waters and colonize new shores. Bioko, however, was part of the mainland until 12,000 years ago, when rising sea levels cut off what had been a peninsula. It鈥檚 an ark whose residents have evolved completely isolated from their counterparts on the mainland. Today at least two of the island鈥檚 birds鈥擣ernando Po Batis and Fernando Po Speirops鈥攁re found only here, and some of its three dozen or so avian subspecies may well be unique species worthy of protection.
Despite its allure, the country鈥檚 birdlife remains remarkably understudied. Ornithologists had barely begun systematic surveys when Equatorial Guinea achieved independence from Spain in 1968. Turmoil ensued鈥攕chool closures, infrastructure decay, economic collapse, and a 1979 coup d鈥櫭﹖at that put Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo in power鈥攈alting ecological research for two decades. The 1990s saw greater political stability, and researchers began returning. Oil companies came then, too, after vast offshore reserves were discovered. This past April President Obiang was reelected to his sixth seven-year term, besting six opponents with an eyebrow-raising 94 percent of the vote. His reign secured, he鈥檚 pushing on with his petrodollar-fueled plans to massively expand infrastructure. Most ambitious is Oyala, the new capital rising out of the rainforest on the mainland; unlike Malabo, the current capital, which is on Bioko, it鈥檚 safe from seaborne coup attempts, like one in 2009. Now, with oil production waning, Obiang is looking to build up other industries, including ecotourism.
Currently, a visitor鈥檚 best, perhaps only, bet for getting into this wilderness is through the , the country鈥檚 oldest conservation organization. When American conservation biologist Gail Hearn first visited in 1990, Bioko鈥檚 monkeys blew her away, leading her to establish the BBPP in 1998. Now a joint venture of Drexel University in Philadelphia and the National University of Equatorial Guinea, it鈥檚 one of the few green groups here. It studies the island鈥檚 biodiversity, and its long-term research documents bushmeat consumption and tracks primates and marine turtles in the Luba Crater Scientific Reserve. The camps we inhabit during our expedition, the trails we follow, the guides and porters we hire, the entry permit, are all thanks to the BBPP.
Nobody took up birds with the same dedication. The most extensive avian investigation to date took place on Bioko and the mainland over 100 days from 1989 to 1992. UCLA tropical-forest bird expert Tom Smith sampled the caldera鈥檚 flank on another expedition, in June 1996; drenched conditions made it impossible to enter the crater itself. The efforts that followed were sporadic, aside from one ongoing project: Since 2011 the BBPP has regularly netted birds at the Moka Wildlife Center, the country鈥檚 only field station.
That haphazard history makes the Biodiversity Initiative鈥檚 plan to return annually incredibly valuable, says Drew Cronin, a BBPP primatologist who oversees the group鈥檚 bird surveys. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 have nearly the expertise they do,鈥 he says. 鈥淛acob is like a bird Rain Man. Jared is a molt expert鈥攈e can age birds by their feathers. And Luke has great general bird knowledge. They鈥檙e inherently going to be able to document more species.
鈥淭he bottom line,鈥 Cronin continues, 鈥渋s the more we can understand what鈥檚 there, the more leverage we have to protect it.鈥 Time is short, and not just because of development. Climate models forecast that temperatures will rise drastically in Africa. 鈥淓verything is getting mixed up, and we really don鈥檛 know what the ecological impacts will be,鈥 Smith says. 鈥淭he more people pushing for conservation, the better.鈥
It was Cooper who first mentioned going to Equatorial Guinea. Three years ago, when he was an undergraduate at Louisiana State University studying ornithology and Powell was a grad student there, they pitched in for two weeks on an American Redstart project near Jamaica鈥檚 remote Cockpit Country. Although it was Cooper鈥檚 first visit, while out birding he鈥檇 count many more birds than Powell, who鈥檇 done Yellow Warbler research there. Cooper had crammed before the trip, memorizing species and their songs, and studied in-country at night. 鈥淭his guy鈥檚 legit,鈥 Powell recalls thinking. One evening, looking over the unspoiled habitat, the two mused about bird surveys in other little-known places. Cooper, who manages the eBird checklist for Central Africa, approving entries to the online avian database, mentioned that Equatorial Guinea had zero entries. Back home, Powell鈥檚 research confirmed the paucity of avian information and revealed that Equatoguineans speak Spanish, which he speaks fluently. 鈥淚 was like, well, shit, we have to go.鈥
He recruited Wolfe, an LSU grad student and the founder of the Louisiana Bird Observatory, where Cooper volunteered. 鈥淗e鈥檚 a great ornithologist,鈥 Powell says of Wolfe. 鈥淎nd I needed more support than Jacob, who was just so green.鈥
The trio self-funded the first trip to the tune of $4,000. They鈥檝e since raised roughly $15,000 a year through a National Geographic grant, private donations, and a Kickstarter campaign鈥攅nough to keep coming back. 鈥淭here鈥檚 so much to discover, practically everywhere you look,鈥 says Wolfe.
From the patio of the BBPP office in Malabo, Cooper spotted Ethiopian Swallows zipping about. A new species recorded for Bioko, hiding in plain sight.
Our first morning at Hormigas (鈥渁nts,鈥 in Spanish) we swig instant coffee and devour rice and Spam that the cook, Apolonio, reheats on the fire. The conversation revolves around vivid dreams induced by malaria meds. That, and hyraxes. The rabbit-size, nocturnal mammals have an earsplitting territorial call that begins as insistent shrieks and grows to a desperate pitch. They scream for hours.
Powell breaks in. It鈥檚 time to split into two groups and go birding.
鈥淵es,鈥 Wolfe agrees. 鈥淚鈥檒l take Jacob.鈥
鈥淣o way,鈥 says Powell. 鈥淲e鈥檒l flip for him.鈥
They know Cooper will tally the most birds. Wolfe grumbles good-naturedly when he loses the toss. He, Brzeski, and guide Cirilo head north. I go south with Powell, Cooper, and Amancio Motove Eting眉e, a student at the National University of Equatorial Guinea. Our guide, Miguel, is from Ureca. He strolls noiselessly, hands behind him, pausing to point out duikers bounding through tangled undergrowth and monkeys in treetops. He stops me from stepping on bratwurst-size turds of drills, highly endangered primates we haven鈥檛 seen yet. We mark the spot for Brzeski.
We move slowly, looking, listening. Cooper, audio recorder running, notes a heated exchange between two Chestnut Wattle-eyes, plump, flycatcher-like birds. African Grey Parrots, abundant on Bioko but dwindling nearly everywhere else due to the pet trade and deforestation, gab in the canopy. A Hadada Ibis floats overhead. Somewhere a Chocolate-backed Kingfisher calls mournfully; the best regional guidebook says it occurs only at far lower elevations. We step over a column of vicious driver ants that may have attracted the insectivorous Velvet-mantled Drongo, whose unmistakable grating electronic sound cuts through the ubiquitous chups and whistles of the Little Greenbul.
An unfamiliar song sends Cooper and Powell searching for the vocalist. It鈥檚 reddish, with a short bill: a Rufous Flycatcher-Thrush.
Cooper shakes his head. 鈥淚t sounds really weird.鈥
鈥淒ifferent subspecies?鈥
Cooper shrugs. 鈥淚t could just be an alternate song I鈥檓 not familiar with. I need to do more research.鈥
In all, the two teams detect about three dozen species. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not very birdy,鈥 says Powell. Maybe, Wolfe says, the habitat is lacking, or the primates could be keeping the bird numbers down. A discussion ensues about comparing the primate-rich caldera to a topographically similar area with rampant poaching. It鈥檚 the fifth potential research project I鈥檝e heard about since breakfast, and banding hasn鈥檛 even begun.
That afternoon we set up 20 39-foot-long mist nets suspended between saplings the guides had expertly macheted. Two more nets go near the picathartes ledge.
The nets open at first light. Wolfe fumbles the first capture, a Forest Robin that escapes into the trees. 鈥淛ared is one of the best banders in the U.S.,鈥 says Brzeski, 鈥渂ut he needs his coffee.鈥
Cooper helps untangle birds; once the nets are clear, he鈥檒l conduct an audiovisual survey, counting far more birds than the nets snag. He places the captives in cotton bags and delivers them to the banding station. Motove, the novice, removes a Forest Robin from a bag. Under Wolfe鈥檚 patient guidance, he attaches a numbered aluminum leg band, calls out species name, age, sex, wing and tail length, molt condition, and fat presence, which Brzeski records; over time, recaptures reveal critical information about the survival of bird populations. Next, Powell collects blood and a feather for an avian malaria study and genetic analysis. Any bags with guano smears will go to a researcher in the United Kingdom, who will determine the birds鈥 diets.
Cooper may use some of this data for his Ph.D. project on mountain-dwelling birds in Cameroon and Equatorial Guinea, comparing the birds鈥 genetics and songs. Differences could indicate that a subspecies has diverged into a distinct species.
Motove processes a bird every 20 minutes or so. Wolfe watches carefully for signs of stress鈥攜awning beak, drooping head or eyelids鈥攔eady to intervene if necessary. It never is. I ask Wolfe how long one bird takes him. 鈥淢aybe a minute or two?鈥 Later, when dark clouds gather and a few fat raindrops fall, Wolfe jumps in so they can release the birds before it pours. I time him: 58 seconds flat.
Around 11 a.m., as banding is wrapping up, Wolfe goes to check the picathartes nets. An hour later he鈥檚 back. 鈥淕uys, I think I heard it!鈥 Finding empty nets, he scrambled below the waterfall, where he flushed something in the thick vegetation and heard a coughing noise. He鈥檚 sure it was a pica. As we pack up that afternoon to go to North Camp for three days, Powell laments moving four miles from the caldera鈥檚 only known nesting site. Brzeski sets up a video camera on the ledge. Don鈥檛 get your hopes up, she tells me. At that distance, any animal across the 40-foot expanse will likely be an unidentifiable blur.
A mile out of camp, I鈥檓 sorely missing the porters. And chiding myself for not adding weights to my training hikes.
I forget my discomfort when we see the monkey skeleton. Brzeski and Wolfe are flabbergasted. They were here yesterday on their Cooper-less hike; it wasn鈥檛. Maybe they somehow missed it. Or perhaps it died yesterday afternoon and driver ants picked it clean overnight. It鈥檚 unsettlingly plausible. The tiny carnivores are known for stripping prey to the bone.
Cooper has wandered away from the macabre scene. He鈥檚 eyeing the canopy, recorder held aloft. 鈥淲hat the . . .鈥 he mutters, then whistles: whew whew whew whew whoo whoo. Listening for birds is something he can鈥檛 shut off. On his second date with his now-wife, she was baffled when he suddenly grabbed her and, instead of kissing her, said, 鈥淒o you hear that?鈥 then ran off to find a hooting Great Horned Owl. Now he calls to the photographer: 鈥淭ristan. Camera. Now.鈥 The command pulls everyone but Brzeski away from the skeleton to look for the mystery bird.
We pish and vie for a look at the bird darting about. Finally, Wolfe locks onto it with his binoculars.
鈥淥kay, I think it鈥檚 a longbill,鈥 he says.
鈥淎 longbill?鈥 Cooper is incredulous. 鈥淚t sounds wrong.鈥
鈥淲ell, gray head, yellow eye, longish bill, yellow body.鈥
鈥淭hat perfectly describes a Yellow Longbill,鈥 Cooper agrees. 鈥淥n the mainland it goes tick tick tick tick tick tick.鈥
鈥淒oes that song jibe?鈥 asks Wolfe.
鈥淣o,鈥 says Cooper, again whistling whew whew whew whew whoo whoo. The tiny bird replies. 鈥淚 have never heard that before.鈥
He鈥檒l review the recording later, and possibly add Bioko鈥檚 Yellow Longbill to the list of caldera birds that warrant investigation as distinct species.
Our surroundings grow increasingly wild. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like the Land of the Lost,鈥 says Cooper. The limbs of moss-covered trees drip with vines and orchids. We wade through towering grasses. Ominous black millipedes and cheery fuzzy caterpillars inch along super-size ferns. Butterflies in a kaleidoscope of colors flit about. Dozens of saucer-size orb weavers with hairy red legs and bulky black bodies hang overhead; each spider's web stretches 10 feet or more between trees, swelling and shifting like a kite in the wind. Monkey troops berate us every 15 minutes or so. We keep moving, until we hear deep woofs. Drills! Hunting has wiped out these baboon-like monkeys from nearly all but the island鈥檚 most remote southern reaches. We鈥檝e been looking for them for days. Now five are in a tree 20 feet from us. It鈥檚 exhilarating. And intimidating. The alpha male鈥攁pparent from his vibrant red and violet genitals鈥攎ust weigh 60 pounds. They watch us for several minutes, then nonchalantly move away.
At North Camp, Apolonio is preparing our Spam-and-pasta dinner over the stone-ring fire pit. We claim level-ish places to pitch tents, and bathe in the stream at the edge of camp. 鈥淭his is so plush,鈥 Wolfe says.
This crew is familiar with the hardships of fieldwork. They鈥檝e picked hundreds of ticks off each other, nursed one another through injuries and ferocious bouts of vomiting and diarrhea. They鈥檝e subsisted on rodent gravy and rice made by Wolfe (trail name 鈥淐ook-y鈥). On their first Equatorial Guinea expedition, before the road was completed, the guys hiked from Ureca to the Moka field station. They immediately ditched their banding plans. The blackflies and mosquitoes were relentless. It poured nonstop, transforming the rugged hunting trail into a miserable mud slick. Cooper started out sick, then became violently ill from an allergic reaction to the duct tape he鈥檇 used to cover painful blisters on his feet. Powell and Wolfe split his 50-pound load. By day three they were nearly out of food and so thirsty they drank iodine-treated puddles. 鈥淲e were disgusting, exhausted, delirious,鈥 says Wolfe. 鈥淚t felt like we reached Moka just in time.鈥
Our trip hasn鈥檛 been entirely without mishaps. Powell and Cooper suffer stomach cramps after drinking water from a former diesel container. A deadly Jameson鈥檚 mamba slithers into the kitchen one evening and rears up, but doesn鈥檛 strike. The Hormigas toilet鈥攁 tarp-covered pit鈥攊s home to snakes, bats, spiders, and swarms of bees. Nearly everyone experiences some combination of bee stings at the latrine, caterpillar rashes, and ant bites; Cooper gets the worst of it when ants invade his tent one night through an imperfectly closed zipper. Another night a millions-strong army of ants swarms the ground behind the kitchen benches during dinner. In a flash the guides douse the area with gas and light a match. The huge swoosh and wall of flame send us scrambling back in giddy terror. Cirilo assures us the ants won鈥檛 cross the fire line. We鈥檙e safe, he says.
Over the next two days, Brzeski sets up camera traps and everyone else settles into banding. Motove handles birds with greater confidence, from petite hummingbird-like Olive Sunbirds to a hearty Grey-headed Negrita, a black finch whose red irises indicate it鈥檚 an adult male. He cuts his processing time in half. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like one pop quiz after another,鈥 he says.
Before traveling to the caldera, the team conducted a two-day session on banding and mammal surveys for 16 students from the national university. It鈥檚 the third year they鈥檝e taught the course, where they met Motove last year. 鈥淭here aren鈥檛 a lot of people here who study ecology, forestry, or biology,鈥 says Maximiliano Fero, a botanist and the research chair at the university, and the person who issues biological sample export permits for the Biodiversity Initiative. 鈥淟ittle by little it鈥檚 growing, but that鈥檚 why collaborations with international partners like the Biodiversity Initiative are so desirable.鈥
On paper, a quarter of Equatorial Guinea is protected, but poaching and illicit logging are rampant. The country鈥檚 protected-areas agency, INDEFOR-AP, is motivated to do biological surveys and crack down on illegal activity, the BBPP鈥橲 Cronin says, 鈥渂ut they have a shoestring budget and little political support.鈥
Bushmeat is a major conservation threat. It鈥檚 a staple here, sold at a huge Malabo market and roadside stands. The BBPP has tracked bushmeat sales, a proxy for hunting levels, for nearly two decades. Last year Cronin and colleagues reported that from 1997 to 2010, Malabo market surveyors counted more than 35,000 monkeys (illegal to kill since 2007), nearly 59,000 duikers, some 81,000 rodents, and more than 4,100 birds, including Black-casqued Hornbills, Great Blue Turacos, and Palm-nut Vultures. Sales have increased over time, tracking economic prosperity.
Deforestation is the other main danger to wildlife. 鈥淭he rate of deforestation in Equatorial Guinea is at an all-time high,鈥 says Katy Gonder, the BBPP鈥檚 director. That鈥檚 largely due to clearing land for Oyala, the new capital, though logging occurs in reserves throughout the country, as Biodiversity Initiative members have seen firsthand. While out with two INDEFOR-AP employees, touring a protected area on the mainland, they came across 鈥渉uge dudes with huge muscles ripping boards with chainsaws in the middle of the forest,鈥 as Wolfe recalls it. The operation had obviously been running for some time. The supervisor spouted veiled threats, then tried bribes, before finally agreeing to shut down. The feds confiscated five chainsaws, and the company was ultimately fined, says Wolfe.
This year the Biodiversity Initiative provided two field techs with gear and training to band birds in two 100-hectare plots outside Oyala鈥攐ne logged, the other untouched. The project lays the groundwork for a long-term study on how disturbance affects birds and mammals.
A $50,000 U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service grant the Biodiversity Initiative has applied for would go toward expanding operations next year, training more students and federal scientists. Having locals collect data year-round will expand the knowledge of the country鈥檚 avifauna, and the presence of surveyors in protected areas would help deter illegal activities, as they witnessed during the logging run-in.
Boots on the ground are vital, says the BBPP鈥檚 Gonder. At Moraka, the sea turtle camp, poachers stay away when volunteers are present. When they leave, hunters move in, evidenced by the shotgun shells.
鈥淲e鈥檝e seen a lot of international researchers and organizations come and go,鈥 says Gonder. 鈥淓quatorial Guinea is a very challenging place to do conservation work. You have to have buy-in at all levels, from local people to the highest echelons of government.鈥 The BBPP has worked extensively with the government to put in place conservation policies, to create protected areas on Bioko, to help found an environmental studies department at the university, and to hire locals to do everything from conducting wildlife surveys to providing tourism support. Gonder鈥檚 encouraged by the Biodiversity Initiative鈥檚 drive to return every year, to collaborate, and to expand its reach. 鈥淟uke and his people seem very committed,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd we need that here.鈥
Powell says they鈥檙e in it for the long haul鈥攂ut not forever. 鈥淲e want to become obsolete,鈥 he says. 鈥淭o train people here to do conservation science, and then let them protect their own natural heritage.鈥
On our penultimate day in the caldera, we leave North Camp for Hormigas. Brzeski and Wolfe stop at the camera traps along the trail to swap out used cards for blank ones; a Moraka volunteer will retrieve them in April. They fall behind. Cooper is explaining his distrust of baboons and fear of snapping turtles when their screams jolt us to a stop. 鈥淎re they hurt?鈥 asks Cooper. We can鈥檛 tell. We race back up the trail.
Brzeski and Wolfe meet us part way, she triumphantly holding her digital camera in the air like a trophy, he shouting: 鈥淧icathartes! Picathartes!鈥
The scientists exuberantly exchange high-fives, everyone yammering as the red-capped bird hops comically across the screen. Powell asks, 鈥淲hat was the time stamp?鈥 Brzeski checks. The bird triggered the camera 26 hours ago. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to try and catch it, right?鈥 says Powell.
We have three hours of sunlight. Wolfe, visibly torn, goes with Brzeski to hit the other camera traps. The rest of us鈥擯owell, Cooper, Motove, photographer Tristan Spinski, and I鈥攚ill try to capture the elusive bird.
Powell is in full leader mode, instructing Motove to set up two nets, one on either side of the 150-foot-high ceiba tree the picathartes strutted past. He puts the chances of catching it at 10 percent. 鈥淲ell,鈥 he reconsiders after a moment, 鈥渕ake that seven percent.鈥
Cooper shares that skepticism. He鈥檚 spent countless hours in Cameroonian forests searching for this bird. Once, at a newly built nest, he waited so long he literally watched the mud dry. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 stand a chance, but we have to try,鈥 he says.
Nets up, we huddle around Powell for final instructions: We鈥檙e each to take a quadrant, face away from the net, and keep still. Spinski will position himself across from the tree, the best vantage point for getting a shot. If a pica wanders into our quadrant, we鈥檙e to let everyone know, then shoo it into the net. 鈥淚t probably won鈥檛 hurt you,鈥 Powell says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about one-third the size of a chicken.鈥
I am certain that if the bird enters my quadrant, I will blow the capture. I want reinforcements. I ask how to alert everyone if I spot the bird.
鈥淲histle the Carolina Chickadee song,鈥 says Cooper. 鈥淣othing here sounds like it.鈥
This suggestion is met with three blank stares. The photographer, the Equatoguinean, and I have no idea what a Carolina Chickadee sounds like.
Powell sighs. 鈥淛ust shout, 鈥楤ird!鈥 鈥
We wade into the brush and take position. Cooper starts the picathartes playback on his phone. It sounds like an inexperienced driver shifting gears. It could be an alarm call, a territorial call, a mating call鈥攊t鈥檚 the only one he could find, and nobody knows what message it鈥檚 sending the bird, assuming it鈥檚 even in earshot. The size of picathartes鈥 range is yet another unknown.
The wait is, at turns, exciting, nerve-racking, and tedious. At one point a crash nearby startles me and I slip off my log. Probably just a rodent.
After 45 minutes, Powell calls it quits. 鈥淢an, it鈥檚 out here somewhere,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e gotta come back.鈥 Cooper pats him on the shoulder. They aren鈥檛 returning this year. Tomorrow we leave the caldera.
Porters appear the next morning and take off with our packs. After a last round of banding鈥攏ine birds, one a recapture鈥攚e follow, crossing the river, climbing up and out of the crater. We spend the night at Moraka, the crashing waves barely dampening the hyrax cries. The next day we retrace the path along the beach, each step drawing us closer to cold beer and fried chicken. The caldera rises in the distance, impossibly far away.
The scientists spread out at the Moka field station the next morning. Cooper is birding; he adds the Great Reed Warbler to the country list. Powell is organizing the info Fero will need to issue export permits for blood and feathers from the 780 birds the team captured throughout the monthlong expedition. Wolfe is doing laundry. Brzeski is on her computer, watching camera trap footage. She lets out a joyful WHOOP!
A week ago, four hours after we left Hormigas for North Camp, the waterfall camera recorded video of a picathartes jumping off a log on the ledge and crossing the shelf. Wolfe is vindicated. 鈥淚 am convinced I heard it,鈥 he says after seeing the footage.
In May Brzeski receives the six camera traps left out for nearly three months. They recorded 13,000 images. A menagerie parades across her screen: monkeys, bushbabies, cat-like oyans, pangolins, porcupines, duikers. And on every camera, picathartes. Multiple birds were there, hidden, perhaps watching furtively as we tromped through the forest, fruitlessly searching for them. For all we saw in the caldera, it seems we barely glimpsed the place.