Richard Conniff’s Wildlife Writing
International journalist Richard Conniff has reported on animals that fly, swim, crawl and leap in his 40 years of writing
- By T.A. Frail
- Smithsonian.com, May 26, 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
There’s a lot of individual eccentricity. On the other hand, it’s curious that a number of them in the book seem to name their animals after single-malt whiskeys, so there’s something going on there. As a group, they seem to specialize is sitting back, setting aside their assumptions and watching what the animals really do. And that means they see new things that we can’t imagine. My favorite biologist of that sort is guy named Bill Eberhard, who studies spiders. Most people won’t look at a spider web twice, but he’ll look at one a hundred times. He discovered a species of spider that produces a pheromone to lure a specific kind of male moth, and as it get closer the spider fires this gooey ball of silk thread and pulls the moth in and eats it. Eberhard named that species dizzydeani, after the baseball pitcher. He showed me a dozen things that were equally weird when I was traveling with him in Costa Rica.
Obviously, a lot of people are paying a great deal of attention to climate change and other worrisome ecological events, and yet, as you note, researchers seem to be discovering new species all the time. How do you reconcile such apparently contradictory phenomena?
Well, one reason we keep discovering new species is that we’re cutting roads into places we’ve never been before. I was once in a rainforest in Ecuador, reporting a story for Smithsonian magazine, when a felled tree came so close to the biologist I was working with that it almost killed him. From that tree he took an orchid he’d never seen before—a specimen that would have been really exciting, except it was a specimen from a habitat that would be gone by the end of the week. So finding new species isn’t necessarily good news. One thing I try to do is to keep this stuff fun and get people engaged in a positive way, because once you see how weird and wonderful this stuff is, you don’t want to lose it.
Of all the animals you’ve written about, which ones would you most like to live among?
The wild dogs. I liked the African wild dogs a lot, the ones living on the Okavango Delta in Botswana. These dogs are very closely connected to the other members of their group, and they get to run through some beautiful countryside and chase fast food, in the form of impalas. They just seemed to live really well. Unfortunately, they’re almost extinct. But maybe if we pay more attention, they’ll survive.
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Comments (5)
Can Mr. Conniff tell me the date of photos taken at Mammoth Site, Hot Springs, South Dakota. I was reading article and thought my husband and I are in the photos. What's the odds? Well, was just curious. Thanks Phyllis
Posted by Phyllis Cottle on July 26,2011 | 02:25 PM
Richard Conniff lastest book 'The Species Seekers, i have a copy and i am about to read it.
Posted by Bob Michaels on November 20,2010 | 12:31 AM
I read your article on Mastodons and Mammoths with great interest. I used to live in northern California. There was a newspaper there at the time called the Independent Herald. Once a week, there would be an article on what happened 25 years ago, 50 years ago and 75 years ago. I remember one in the 75 year ago classification that said a farmer about 10 miles north of Yuba City, had been plowing his field and had a found a very large tusk. I had always wanted to go to the farmer and get permission to dig it up. I think scrimshawers would really like to get a hold of something like that. I never heard any more about the farmer excavating the area to find a whole skeleton or possibly a few others. As I remember from when I saw the article around 1975, the discovery would have been near the turn of the century. If I can find any more information on this subject I will let you know.
Robert Ramsdell
Albany, Oregon
Posted by Robert Ramsdell on March 27,2010 | 08:04 PM
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/05/27/the-consolation-of-animals/
Posted by aquamanatee on February 24,2010 | 01:21 AM
I can't find R Coniff's "The Consolation of Animals", but this interview is wonderful...It's 1:35 a.m. and I'm still looking ... I feed any thing with wings...I love them all.
I never fail to thank God for His wonderful creations..so perfect in everyway.
Posted by Helen Alex on May 29,2009 | 01:38 AM