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IN LAND OF PIGMIES

NATIONAL PARK CREATED PROTECTION OF ANIMALS. THE MOUNTAIN GORILLA. Probably one of the most, creditable achievements in the preservation of wild flora, wild -game, and a wild primitive people for the purposes of scientific research is the founding of The Albert National Park in the heart of the Belgian Congo—a prodigious work, which is now nearing completion. The remarkable progress achieved to .date, and plans for the extension of the work, were outlined recently by Baron de Cartier de Marchienne, the Belgian Ambassador to Britain, and Dr. J. M. Derschicd. Secretary of the International Informatory Office for the Protection of Nature, at Brussels, the scientific inves tigator who was responsible for practical working out of the plan. “It was King Albert who first, in 1925, decided to institute this national park,” Baron do Cartier explained. “In the course of his travels in America, as Heir Apparent, in 1899. he had visited the great national parks there, such as the Yellowstone and Yosemite Valley, and he was anxious that similar reserves for native fauna and flora should be created in the Congo. But with this difference: Whereas these great parks in the United States are run chiefly for the benefit of visitors and holiday-seekers, that in the I Congo, with its rare natural resources, should, first and foremost, subserve the interests of international science—constitute a great scientific centre, in fact, where the scientists of he world could study, undisturbed and unmolested,

animal, plant, and native life in their actual, unspoilt environment.”

THE MOUNTAIN GORILLA.

Dr. Dersceid, taking up the narrative, explained that the area of the park was now no less than 4*50,000 acres, comprising hilly bush country, plain, and marshland, between the two great lakes of Kivu and Edward, and including eight big volcanoes, two of them active, highest rising to 15,000 ft. Living unhampered in this vast area were at least 600 specimens of the big mountain gorilla not found in any other part of the world, some 80,000 antelopes of every kind, chimpanzees, baboons, more than 100 elephants, buffaloes, hippopotami, rare birds, and —to complete this natural wonderland of wild life—a tribe of about 300 pigmies, which it was thought best not to disturb in any way, but leave to live their normal life as hunters of bush pig and antelope with spear and bow and arrow.

“An American scientist, the late Carl Akeley, of the American Museum of Natural History, had been over the ground in 1921,” said Dr. Dorscheid, “and he informed Baron de Cartier that he thought it ideal for the national park he had in mind. A start was made by marking, as a game reserve in which all shooting was prohibited, a fringe of bush encircling the original area, and thus completely isolating it from native interference. In this way the National Albert Park began in 1925. “In 1926 Akeley and myself, with Mrs. Akeley and two assistants, began a thorough survey of the ground after studying the methods of the British game preserves around Nairobi. Unfortunately, we were only eight days on our journey when Akeley died from exposure, for although we were but one degree from the equator, snow lay thick at that high elevation. Mrs. Akeley, despite her grief, stayed on, and, thanks to her inspiring example, we were able to complete the work her husband had set out to accomplish.

EXTERMINATION PREVENTED. It is certain that, if these steps had not been taken, the gorillas would have been totally exterminated in a few years, for a specimen is worth about £2OO to the native hunter,” declared Dr. Dorscheid. “They are fine beasts, about sft tall, and harmless enough if you do not provoke them when, say, they are with their young. I have been as near as 10yds to a herd of them, and only once war- I attacked. The female rears its young in a sort of lair on the ground, but when the youngster gets to four or five years old it is made to sleep in branches above ground at night to guard it. from surprise attacks by leopards and so forth, while the adults lie side by side on the ground beneath. \ . “But, interesting as these gorillas are, the pigmies, living their normal life in their natural environment of wild forest, are even more interesting, from the' scientific point of view. Their presence in the midst of the Albert National Park -will help to keep the natural balance of nature, which is what we want, above all, to see preserved. “As for the climate, it is, of course, tropical in the low areas, but very healthy and alpine in the high. The landscape is a wonderful one; in parts, you will find wild heather growing to a height of several feet.” One corner of the gorilla country, in the Bufumbiro district, extends for about 24 square miles/ into British Uganda. An effort is accordingly to be made to induce the Uganda authorities to mark off this section also as a game preserve, and thus prevent native disturbance of these rare creatures; and the destruction of the forest by charcoalmakers.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19290726.2.33

Bibliographic details

Taranaki Daily News, 26 July 1929, Page 7

Word Count
858

IN LAND OF PIGMIES Taranaki Daily News, 26 July 1929, Page 7

IN LAND OF PIGMIES Taranaki Daily News, 26 July 1929, Page 7

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