Assorted Local Fauna

The best part of being in the Malagasy wilderness is being around Malagasy wildlife. These are the various local creatures I encountered. Not all are identified, as I honestly don't know what the heck some of them were.

The object of the whole expedition, a fossa! This shot was captured by a camera trap. This image copyright Luke Dollar 2001.

This butterfly was quite willing to hold still while I got very close with the camera.
The top of this species' wings is darker and more richly colored, but somewhat out of focus. Biologists are baffled.
This bug was easily three inches long and at least four across the wings, and held completely still while I took its picture. Courteous insects down there.
This is a caterpillar. The full photo of it is approximately life-size. No joke.
Look closely. Those aren't flowers; they're bugs.
A chameleon crossing the street.
Same chameleon, doing his best to look inconspicuous in hopes I'll leave him alone.
Our guide that day picked him up so I could get this gorgeous shot.
Chameleons' only good trick besides "hope it doesn't notice me" is the creation of these white warning spots, which supposedly dissuade predators.
This gecko was hiding in the crack of a tree, peering out at us.
This little guy would come into the dining area to drink the puddle of water that spilled from our water filters.
Another cute local lizard, possibly a gecko.
A kestrel perched in a tree. Amazingly beautiful bird.
Sadly, this was as close as I was able to get. My kingdom for a telephoto lens.
A Madagascar scops owl, sleeping in the daylight. In reality, it was about the size of my fist.
I don't know what made this nest in the dining hall, but it's a remarkable design.
We had no idea what this cocoon belonged to or what might hatch from it. Actually, I still don't.
A hognose snake that passed through camp.
A snake that moved slower than I did.
This is a great way to get snakes to hold still for portraits.
This is one of a number of turtles kept at a local turtle breeding preserve.
A wooly lemur in a tree, staring down at us.
The wooly lemur is nocturnal, so its eyes have to reflect a lot of light. They work.
One night in the forest I noticed this wooly lemur regarding me curiously from a nearby tree.
DAMN
He was about twenty or twenty-five feet away, and didn't seem to mind the camera flashes.
One of a group of brown lemurs we saw in JBA one morning.
The same group of brown lemurs, wondering what the foreigners with the cameras are staring at.
This is where my photos of a family of Coquerel's sifakas would go, if I hadn't forgotten my &#%$ing camera that day.

 

Whatever you do, don't miss the famous fossa movie!

 

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