Sunday, September 2, 2012

Filling the Gaps

Searching for the breeding cliffs from the reserve side  




               This Friday when we got back from the August vulture monitoring trip, a set of old slides were brought out to examine. I’m actually not even sure how slides are made. I opened the box that said “The plight of the Cape Vulture”, these belonged to the late scientist that researched the vultures for decades (and who took the photographs of the site I work at).
                 
              The slides were for a presentation about Cape Vulture conservation. It included such phrases as “Cape vultures go everywhere, so they need to be conserved everywhere”. Three out of the 100 or so slides contained information about the site register. The register is almost like a work of fiction to me. It is a compilation of all roosting and breeding Cape Vulture sites. Imagine having 2,000 records of where one species of bird slept and reproduced. It is a massive undertaking, but for a vulture that is 90% restricted to South Africa it is necessary. 

Not all vulture colonies are this easy to find...  




                     As I go through the slides, I find another clue in this mystery. My studies have the makings of a good novel: interesting characters, thrilling adventures, idiotic moments (car keys), dead animals, and giant birds. Ok, it might not be a typical novel, but a good one nonetheless. 

Students Investigating during the June 2012 trip
 
                As I conduct my work and continue to read, write, and collect data I am constantly reminded that it does matter.  From communicating and working with conservationists, scientists, retired researchers, professors, volunteers, and undergraduate students I am beginning to piece together the bigger picture. As a grad student, that is my job; to synthesize information and to boil it down. It is hard work, but I’m putting it together piece by piece.