An update here, I hope he uploads it

, I try to update the big year thread to

, very hopefull with 3 sreens open now....
I have now been in the Betampona Reserve for about 4 weeks. Most days we go out in the Reserve and look for snails, but because of my research far from always into the primary forest, which is of course nicer than the disturbed forests. Although these disturbed forests still have a higher diversity then most European forests, but that’s normal here in the tropics, that even the dullest place is home to some nice species.
As I do have to work, which means looking for snails a lot, I cannot behave as I would usually do in a forest. But on the forest floor and on the way to and from the plots we usually see something nice everyday and even at the research station nice sightings are guaranteed, although not daily. I am not going to describe every day, but just pick out some nice sightings etc.
My highlight here at the research station are the bamboo lemurs who tend to visit once in a while. When I was reading some book in my hut, somebody asked me whether I wanted to see some bamboo lemurs, well of course… stupid question. The lemurs were at 10 meters from my hut and from the hut next to mine you have a very nice view from the balcony, including on some bamboo. And for some reason the bamboo lemurs were on the bamboo. It is a group of 5 animals, I presume a pair with offspring. And normally bamboo lemurs are very cute looking, but a baby bamboo lemur is even more cute looking. Some female spectators were not ashamed to confirm this with all kinds of strange noises.
It also tends to be worthwhile to go to the toilet at night, apart from the obligatory white-fronted brown lemurs, there are sometimes also other mammals to be seen. The first highlight here was a greater hedgehog tenrec, which behaves exactly like the European hedgehogs, which is kind off weird, as they are in no way closely related, but this convergent evolution is quite successful. But this tenrec clearly did not like the fact that I put a big torch on him and after 15 seconds he ran away, the same way a hedgehog would do. The other mammal species I have encountered here were rufous mouse lemurs. I never realized that they make so much noise, it sounds a bit like the south American monkeys, but much higher. But I like to delay my toilet visits for this kind of stuff. Although a body adapting to a diet of rice and beans 2x a day sometimes thinks otherwise…
The biggest mammals here are the indris and they start to be annoying ( I never thought I would say that), it is not that the forest is overcrowded with them, I still only have seen 3. But they compensate for their relatively low number with producing an awful lot of noise. If they produce that noise only between 7 and 7, it would be completely fine. But the start as early as 2:30 AM, which means I have several times be woken up by them. Still better than waking up by rats trying to eat something that is not meant as rat food, but it is as annoying as the Madagascar scops owl uttering his call the whole evening…
When walking into the forest, we see quite some nice animals, although not a lot of species daily. The highlight are probably the brown-tailed vontsiras, small Malagasy carnivores. They occur only in NE-Madagascar and the book says that they are “shy and secretive”. But that is not the way I perceived them the 2 times I have seen them. These small mongooselike creatures seemed very relaxed and kept on eating and devastating some dead palm. 90% of all the sightings of this species comes from the Betampona reserve, so maybe here they are less shy, but it may be the best mammal species I have seen so far, in terms of uniqueness and the number of other people who have seen it too…
Birding remains very difficult in the dense forest, but some nice species we encounter regularly, like both species of vasa parrots. Which are different from other parrots in terms of their dull colouration, just black-greyish and I was also very much surprised by the melodious sounds they have. I thought of parrots as only being able of making very harsh sounds, like macaws, or the annoying screeches of rose-ringed parakeets who have now invaded parts of Europe. The price for most stupid bird in the forest goes to the Madagascar crested ibis. First of all: ibises don’t belong in a forest, they are wetland birds. But a few million years isolation can change pretty much. Although they still look lost on the top of a hill in the middle of a rainforest with no water nearby. The isolation has made them behave like ordinary chickens. Instead of flying away when spotted they just run away on the same path you are walking on. Which means that when you get around the corner, the ibis is just in front of you and starts to run away from you to the next corner. This then continues for several hundred meters sometimes… I do not understand why the Egyptians have chosen an ibis for their god of wisdom, Thoth.
Were birding is more difficult, the herpetofauna compensates for it completely. I have now had 4 different gecko species in my hut alone, which is as much lizard species are occurring in the Netherlands in total… Also very nice are the leaf-tailed geckoes of which there are 3 species here. The nicest species, Uroplatus sikorae, I found by surprise, as I was taking a picture and was putting my hand on a tree stem. Then the tree stem started moving and it appeared that I put my hand on a Uroplatus, bloody camouflage! I have heard the same story now from different people, so it seems to happen quite often.
Apart from all the wildlife there are also 22 million people living in Madagascar and most of them are voting today, which promises to be quite chaotic. Of course for a third world country, the possible choices are a bit strange. There are 2 candidates left, one is a puppet from the former president, who was in charge until the 2009 coup, the other candidate is logically a puppet from the sitting president, who came in office in 2009. I hope that the situation remains stable afterwards, although in the south it appears to be not, even today already. But I am probably on one of the remotest spots, so also one of the safest spots. Although people here all live in huts, made completely out of wood, which does not keep them from cooking with an open fire in these huts. So the risk is larger that we all burn away, then that there is some civil war up here….
Depending on the weather I will stay here constantly till at least half of January, but when it remains dry I will take a small holiday to a mystery destination

( I do not know what I will do yet

). Although it is the rainy season right now, the wettest part of the country has had no serious rain the past 17 days… So far the rainy season, which is doing a good job in the rest of the country though. But I need the rain for the snails to be active, and they are not now, so I am ending up counting palm trees
