Founder’s Briefs: An occasional series where Mongabay founder Rhett Ayers Butler shares analysis, perspectives and story summaries.
The white-necked picathartes is easy to miss. In Taï National Park, in southwestern Côte d’Ivoire, it nests beneath rocky overhangs, shaping mud cups against stone walls deep inside the forest. It may appear for only a few seconds, long enough to show its bare yellow head, black cheek patches, and long-legged frame, before it vanishes again into the trees.
The bird’s elusiveness reflects the kind of habitat it needs, reports contributor Ryan Truscott for Mongabay. Taï is the largest intact remnant of the Upper Guinean rainforest, a forest type that once stretched across much of West Africa. Its boulders, old animal trails, giant mahoganies, duikers, hornbills, monkeys, and river hogs are part of a system that still retains much of its original complexity.
The white-necked picathartes (Picathartes gymnocephalus) depends on rocky nesting sites and surrounding forest cover. Other species help maintain the forest itself. Hornbills, primates, and mammals move seeds through the canopy and across the forest floor, helping trees and lianas regenerate far from their parent plants.
That makes Taï important beyond the survival of any single rare species. Protected areas are often judged by their boundaries, patrol numbers, and better-known animals. A fuller measure is whether ecological relationships continue: animals using long-established routes, seed dispersers moving between fruiting trees, birds returning to nesting walls, and rangers knowing enough of the forest to find those places again.
Keeping those relationships intact depends on ordinary field capacity. Rangers need training, equipment, safe access, and time in the forest. Local organizations need support to monitor species whose decline may be easy to miss until it is advanced. Conservation groups need to treat field signs, ranger knowledge, and repeated observations as evidence.
Asked what the white-necked picathartes means to Ivorians, ranger Gliman Hyacinthe gave Truscott a simple answer: “It’s rare. It’s beautiful.” In Taï, the bird also points to a forest where the conditions for rare species are still present.
Read Ryan Truscott’s story here.
Banner image: A white-necked picathartes (Picathartes gymnocephalus). These curious-looking birds frequent boulder-strewn parts of the rainforest, building their nests on stone walls of overhangs and caves. Image by Charles J. Sharp via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-NC 4.0).
This story first appeared on Mongabay
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