 |
The Wild Call of the Indri
 |
|
A
chameleon stretches himself between two trees in the Périnet
Reserve.
|
In the morning,
we were up early for a hike in the Périnet Reserve. The
weather was cool and there was a steady drizzle of rain. As
we entered the park, Maurice Ratsisakamana was assigned as our
guide, a requirement of the park. Ratsisakamana's knowledge
of the region was vast and the background information he provided
was fascinating.
CARE Project
Manager Chris Dunston and his wife Amy brought their 1-year-old
son, Kai, to the park to see the lemurs. As we trekked through
the park, we were able to see some of the area's lush vegetation,
rare orchids and the black and white indri, whose unforgettable
loud cry awakened the youngest Dunston from his sleep during
our hike. The shriek was like nothing we had heard before; the
high pitched sound resonates through your body. The starkness
of the indri's territorial cry is intended to mark an area of
a family group, Ratsisakamana explained.
The indri
family we saw was high above us in the trees, but we were able
to catch clear glimpses of the rare animal as it jumped from
tree to tree. The indri mate every five to six years, have seven-month
gestation periods, and are monogamous, Ratsisakamana continued.
The indri
lives to be 70 or 80 years old, if its habitat is preserved
like it is at Périnet. Many of Madagascar's lemurs also
are protected through an adoption program sponsored by Duke
University in Durham, North Carolina.
Continue
to Day 4
|