RAZAFINDRATSIMA LAB
  • Home
  • Research
    • Research Overview
    • Frugivory, Movement and Seed Dispersal
    • Ecological changes
    • Conservation & Management
  • Publications
    • Opinion pieces & Editorial articles
    • Scientific Articles
    • Published data
  • People
    • PI Razafindratsima
    • Postdocs & Students >
      • @ Cal
      • Affiliates
    • Past lab members & visitors
    • Field teams
  • Field updates
  • Outreach
  • Join Us
    • Call for applications MS
  • Useful Links
    • Fellowship resources
    • Research in Madagascar
  • Group news
  • Adventures
  • Affiliates

Field Notes #12 - Adventures in forest regeneration at Marojejy National Park

3/16/2024

 
Text and photos by Kat Culbertson
PictureTeam Members Fetra and Edouard pose for a photo on the hike up to Marojejy Summit
​Breath-taking rainforest covered mountains. Clear, cool streams overflowing with tadpoles. Adorable tiny – and I mean tiny – chameleons. Treacherous, steep, muddy, vine-covered terrain. Skipping over slippery rocks on your way to ‘work’. Hiding away in a tent for two weeks at a time. Fending off leaches, wasps, and scorpions…
 
 
If this sounds like I’m describing a grand adventure, then fieldwork in eastern Madagascar may be right for you! While working in Madagascar across the past four years – both as a Peace Corps Volunteer and as an ecology researcher – I’ve had my fair share of both incredible highs and frustrating lows, but I’m excited to report that this last time around, I’ve had the best experience so far.


PictureIn the forest, sometimes the easiest path is a stream...
Starting in summer of 2023, I’ve been lucky enough to launch a project on rainforest regeneration at Marojejy National Park (with the aid of my advisors, my awesome collaborators at the Lemur Conservation Foundation, and three small fieldwork grants). This hyper-diverse reserve is a little patch of mountains – known as a massif – reaching across a 2,000 meter (6,000+ foot) gradient in the northeast corner of Madagascar. The park includes ecosystems ranging from lowland rainforest growing over 30 meters (100+ feet) tall to elevation-stunted dwarf topping out at 10 feet tall to alpine prairies. It is home to more than 2,000 plant species, 11 species of lemurs, and over 80 species of reptiles – just to name a fraction of its biodiversity. While scientific expeditions have been conducted in the park across 70 years, there is still little known about the vast majority of Marojejy’s species and the complex interactions between them. (In fact, one of the trees we snagged leaf samples from last year may be entirely new to science!)

PictureA millipede crawls over the stump of a tree illegally harvested for the precious timber trade
Unfortunately, this international treasure is not immune to the numerous anthropogenic disturbances that threaten biodiversity globally these days. Forests continue to be cleared in across the region – including the more remote reaches of Marojejy park itself – for expansion of cultivation, fuelwood, and timber products. Illegal extraction of precious woods – especially rosewood and ebony – for thirsty international markets also continues deep within the park, a vast reserve of over 50,000ha (193 square miles)  in which it’s easy to hide and challenging to patrol… due to a combination of challenging terrain, poor infrastructure, and lack of funding. Of course, climate change is also affecting the resiliency of the park’s forests and interactions between species across the region – in ways that we don’t know, especially given the lack of baseline data.


PictureKat (the author) and local botanical expert Mr. Edouard pose for a photo next to a giant strangler fig
A conservation situation as complex as this one necessitates a multi-pronged approach to ensure that ecosystems and the biodiversity they contain are preserved for future generations. One key aspect of ecosystem conservation, especially in the face of ongoing deforestation and legitimate demand for timber products, is forest restoration. While tree-planting is currently a hot topic – for its role in carbon sequestration, alongside biodiversity conservation – little is actually known about how to ensure that a scattered saplings develop into a functioning forest ecosystem. This process of natural forest regeneration hinges on a variety of factors that are influenced by specific ecosystems and context, including how degraded the site’s soil is, how far seed-producing trees are from the deforested site, and whether any seed-dispersing critters (such as lemurs and birds) are still around. The further away a restoration site is from the forest, the longer it’s been used by humans, and the more anthropogenic factors nearby that could create new disturbances, the more complicated forest regeneration becomes, and the more divergent trajectories it could take. Unfortunately, few of these trajectories may result in a forest resembling the original one!

The goal of restoration, or assisted natural regeneration, is to ensure forests are back on track to re-growing through eliminating some of the key barriers that are currently blocking the natural regeneration pathway. The relative importance of these barriers varies in different places and different ecosystems, and currently little is known about which ones are the most important to address in Madagascar.
 
Extensive regenerating areas in Marojejy, previously cleared and cultivated, but sitting within a matrix of primary rainforest and abandoned for 25+ years, present a unique opportunity to understand natural forest regeneration pathways and understand the most important barriers to restoration in this context.

Picture
Thick, tall, non-forest vegetation still dominates most deforested areas in Marojejy
This past year’s fieldwork – the actual ‘work’ component of it – involved surveying various regenerating forest areas to assess the type and number of trees growing in them, and evidence for regeneration processes. While I’m still working through the data, the preliminary takeaway is unfortunately that even forests in more-ideal regeneration conditions need our help: Even after 60+ years post-abandonment, old fields in the park are simply thickets of tall herbaceous vegetation, with no or very few trees present. This is a phenomenon known as ‘arrested regeneration’, when an ecosystem gets ‘stuck’ at an early stage along its regeneration journey, and may remain there for decades without additional disturbances or interventions.
 
We’re not sure why this is happening at Marojejy, though it likely is governed by the balance of dispersal factors (are there enough animals around to disperse seeds into regenerating areas?) and competition factors (do herbaceous plants and/or vines grow faster than, and thus outcompete or strangle young trees?), as well as the underlying dynamics of climate change (is the climate simply less suited for forest recovery now than it was 50 years ago?). I’m currently en route back to the field, where I’ll be working with my team to set up an disentangling some of these factors. We hope that this project will inform future restoration and ecosystem management actions in this region and beyond.
​

Stay tuned for the next stages of this research journey!
Picture
Our field team poses for a photo on a rainy day - from left to right: Kat, Richard, Fetra, Dezy, and Fred

Field notes #11

11/30/2023

 
Text by Fetratiana Rakotomanga
Before telling about our adventurous fieldwork, I want to say that I feel lucky to have this opportunity to work with my mentor Katherine Culbertson on the project. At first, I did not plan to apply at all because of the fear of not being capable, or not good enough for that type of project. 
​With the help and advice from my closest friends and my family, I decided to try and have no regrets for taking that opportunity, which has given me the chance to meet and work with extraordinary people.
Picture
Fetra and local botanical expert Edouard pose with a waterfall on the hike to Marojejy’s summit (PC: Katherine Culbertson)
We began our wonderful way in Antananarivo (Tana), where I met my mentor and several other members of the Razafindratsima lab. These connections and planning meetings set a strong foundation to strengthen our knowledge, skills and experiences. Our fieldwork had two different parts, the first month was held at KAFS or Kianjavato Ahmason Field Station, Vatovavy region. The place was calm and peaceful. The friendly team we worked with made it more pleasant too. We had the chance to participate in one of their plantation events in a large gap surrounded by forest.
Picture
KAFS reforestation coordinator Romuald demonstrates how to plant a sapling at a restoration site near Tsitola forest (PC: Katherine Culbertson)
Picture
The day’s work is finished at the Tsitola restoration site
​The astonishing view from famous mountains such as Sangasanga and Vatolahy shows how the complex and interesting landscape might influence the vegetation, especially the view from the top of Vatovavy, the region’s namesake. That view was memorable. The 11th of August, we left Kianjavato, heading to Marojejy. 

Picture
Landscape views from the top of Vatovavy mountain (PC: Fetra Rakotomanga)
​We were sad to leave the great team at Kianjavato but Marojejy National Park still held a special gift for us. ​
Picture
Part of our field team (Fetra, Kat, Edouard, and Dezy) pose for a photo in Marojejy National Park (PC: Frederic Ramahavita)
The place changed but the good vibes remained as we worked with our botanist and local guides. I would like to take the chance to thank all of them – Dezy, Edouard, Fred, Richard, and Rabesahala - who helped us gain more experiences and skills. For example, I learned to identify some species by their distinctive characteristics, like “rara” with red sap like blood (“rara” means blood in Malagasy) and many more. They use vernacular names and morphologic criteria to identify the tree species, which contributes important value to scientific study. ​
I enjoyed the contrast between two weeks inside the humid forest and two days in the city of Sambava. Staying in the forest felt like spending two weeks in paradise, as our guide Dezy always says, and then we came back to the civilization again for two days for supplies. Do not let me forget to say that the song of the stream and all the birds near every camp that we have been in gave us sweet dreams after hard work. I can say that I loved our fieldwork! Thanks also to our collaborators at Lemur Conservation Foundation (LCF) who gave us magnificent days near the ocean when we were out of the forest. 
​
​
Having a guide that is specialized in mammals and amphibians increased considerably our chance to see many endemic frogs like Mantella sp., Boophis sp.; reptile like Brookesia, almost all iconic birds and amphibians that Marojejy is known for, and also the “bokimbolo”: Hapalemur occidentalis that we can see very near at Camp 1. (Photo 6)
Picture
The road became impassable for vehicles on the way to one of our Marojejy field sites, Andongozambe, so we hiked an extra 5km on foot (PC: Fetra Rakotomanga)
Picture
A bokombolo (bamboo lemur, Hapalemur occidentalis) snacks on bamboo near Camp 1 in Marojejy (PC: Katherine Culbertson)
Before leaving the first site, we made the hike of 5.1 km and over 4,000ft in elevation to the “sommet” the two last days. On our way, we saw the Helmet Vanga : Euryceros prevostii. We spent a night in camp 3, a very cold and quiet camp it was. We did not feel very lucky arriving at the top with rain, but it was and will always be a part of the adventure and still we had a wonderful experience.

Sadly, during our fieldwork, we also witnessed many activities that threatened the ecosystem including forest clearance, wood harvesting and some lemur traps. These activities can have a huge impact on the biodiversity that the park shelters. Much work has been done before to try to prevent these illegal activities and conserve the forest, but there is still more to do, so we encourage you to stand with us for the sake of our nature. These ongoing threats to biodiversity show us up close how reforestation (the main research of my mentor) is important.
Picture
Unfortunately, illegal harvest of precious woods, like this tapika tree, is not uncommon within the park (PC: Fetra Rakotomanga)
To wrap up, I want to thank my mentor first for all of the knowledge and skills that she taught me during the fieldwork, and for continuing to mentor me on the development of my research now. The guidelines she gave have helped me build the first criteria of being a scientist as I advance through the first big steps of my career. Second, a big thanks to Dr Onja Razafindratsima and her lab for their hospitality. I was quiet and a little shy at the beginning when I first met the lab, but they never made me feel outside the box. They are very open to everyone and close to each other, so that it does not feel like a lab but a scientific family where you can grow as a seed in a healthy community.
Picture
Fetra enjoys a cup of tea in the forest (PC: Katherine Culbertson)
There is always a starting point for everyone but do not let that make you feel that you are not good enough. There will always be people who have already gone through your stage willing to help you, so I just want to say: “take the chance, give your best and enjoy”.

Field notes #10

10/13/2023

 
Text by Jessica Stubbs
Even in my initial meeting with Onja and first time entering the scientific arena of the Razafindratsima Lab, I was dreaming of Madagascar. The lab’s fluorescent lights transformed to a warm forest glow, the office chairs into exalted Rahiaka trees, and coffee mugs into prodigal epiphytes. I knew the Razafindtratsima Lab would soon become my ecological haven, a space of immense scientific curiosity and professional cultivation. Propelled by the unparalleled guidance of Jade Tonos and galvanized by the extensive data accumulated by the lab, I conducted my Honors Senior Thesis. With every data point I analyzed, scientific article I consumed, and ArcGIS visualization I inscribed, the magnetism of Madagascar intensified. My burgeoning zeal to experience the ecosystems I had studied through the corridors of academia and investigated through the glow of my computer had fortified into an urgent scientific ambition. 
Picture
Jessica holding a rufous mouse lemur in Ranomafana National Park
Thus, when the lab offered me the opportunity to become a Field Technician in Madagascar, I felt as if I was finally able to realize my ecological decree and ameliorate the dissonance between my most profound academic passion and personal experience.
​Armed with robust rubber boots, a plethora of ambiguous antibiotics, and an inexplicable sense of loyalty to the ecosystems and lemurs I was yet to meet, I was ready for anything. The first week in Antananarivo was a vibrant and kinetic rush of unfamiliarity and culture. Scouring the teeming markets for field supplies, absorbing my first words of Malagasy, and ambling along the restless streets was exhilarating. Most exuberant, was having the momentous privilege to experience lab member Vero’s wedding. Dancing in effervescent swirls of Malagasy family members, consuming heaps of aromatic ravitoto, and reveling in the cultural exuberance of the wedding traditions was a singular experience of exceptional joy. The entangled vibrance of Antananarivo was a sensorial introduction to Madagascar and only a nascent glance into the incredible country I was soon to explore. 
Picture
Landscape on the way to Ranomafana (photo by Onja R.)
While driving to Ranomafana, the boisterous contours of the city melted into expansive verdant hills, imbricating agricultural fields, and meandering brown streams. The landscape was punctuated by lines of laboring zebus, rich piles of fresh bricks, intimate huddles of market sellers, opinionated discourses among geese, and clusters of enthralled children. 
After ten turbulent hours drinking in the amorphous scenery from the car window, we arrived at the ValBio Research Station perched in the hills of the Ranomafana village. Settling into Valbio felt akin to reuniting with distant relatives. I ostensibly felt a powerful undertow of deep kinship while meeting the fellow researchers as we all seemed to vibrate with a similar reverence for the ecosystem and space we were occupying. Science innovators, field technicians, international students, and Malagasy conservation practitioners created a space infused with passion.
Picture
View of Ranomafana rainforest (photo by Onja R.)
After a few days gathering our supplies and coordinating our research objectives, we set off through banana fields and up arboraceous mountains to our campsite to begin the real work embedded within the forest. 
Picture
our campsite in Ranomafana (photo by Kat Culbertson 2022)
Our campsite was tucked into a high forest, adorned with misty condensation and opaque with fragrant smoke from the kitchen. After warm introductions with camp members and satiating piles of rice and beans gilded with spicy Malagasy sakay, I settled into my tent and felt an inexplicable sense of belonging in this novel environment with my newfound family. Daily life at camp distilled down to a very simple equation, one that soon revealed its agency to sharpen intellectual focus, foster scientific curiosity, and promote ontological reflection. 
Meals consisted of rice and beans, showers were taken in the river's embrace, purpose was found in the lemurs, and community thrived among the people and biota around us. The endless onslaught of news cycles, inundation of messages and emails, and perennial duty of academic and professional tasks faded into the immediacy and immensity of the forest. The profound reduction in external stimulus honed my abilities as a conservation practitioner and allowed my somatic and cerebral capabilities to unify in the research, questions, and wildlife that enveloped me. ​
Every morning we transformed into tactical lemur detection machines. During daily eight-hour lemur follows we traversed every path the lemur journeyed, measured every tree they nibbled, collected every fecal deposit they generously left behind, and recorded every behavior they displayed. Wading through rivers, ascending ridges, and scaling peaks, our team became unwavering instruments of observation and scientific crusaders of conservation. We quickly fused to the habitual cadence of the lemurs and the pulse of the ecosystem. When the lemurs flew through the forest, we raced behind them and when they napped in the canopy, we rested on the forest floor. Becoming embedded within Madagascar’s natural vivacity was truly an enveloping practice in ecocentrism, one filled with deep intrigue and profound joy. 
Picture
Everyday was met with a multitude of novel lessons, inspiring curiosities, interminable giggles, scientific inquiries, lemur connections, persistent leeches, and legions of rice and beans. Never before had I possessed so few material effects and external comforts, and yet felt so fulfilled. My mind was kinetic with research ideas, empirical conquests, and experimental propositions. After lemur follows, we would march to the lab (a makeshift arrangement of tarp and sticks) and dive into preparing fecal samples with multiple treatments to delineate how the lemur microbiome affects seed germination rates. Conducting innovative science in the middle of the forest truly instilled the importance of embracing constant agility, improvement, and adaptation in an environmental arena of finite resources and unlimited stochasticity. As an emerging conservation practitioner, these experiences fortified my scientific problem-solving dexterity and imprinted an enduring zeal for advancing research on the front lines of conservation.
Beyond catalyzing the counters of my intellectual prowess, the endogenous connections and palpable kingship that developed with the lemurs and fellow field technicians were transformative. Camp members and field technicians became an instant troop of unwavering loyalty. Hundreds of hours spent in the forest welded us together interminably. Picking leeches off each other, sharing meals under the canopy, teaching plant varieties, exchanging languages, and collectively immersing in the centripetal intrigue of the lemurs infused every lemur follow with an immensity of supportive reciprocity. Back at camp, the enveloping sense of community transcended challenging conditions and crystallized into interrelational wisdoms, connections, and understandings. Playing dominos with fierce determination, boldly pioneering novel food concoctions, piling around the fire, and passing jugs of steaming burnt rice water around the table were liminal moments of enduring warmth.
Punctuating our time at camp were both restful and exuberant sojourns at the ValBIo Research Station. There, we extracted DNA by processing our fecal samples utilizing advanced laboratory techniques. In the lab, I sharped my pipetting precision, gained confidence mixing fragile chemicals, and advanced my ability to curate immaculate lab playlists to foster the ideal musical feng shui for science. Spending afternoons in the lab, meals with impassioned researchers, and evenings organizing supplies and trading lemur stories with volunteers further reinforced my avidity and esteem for the imperative research we were conducting. From skillfully collecting lemur fecal deposits from the forest floor to methodically purifying and extracting genetic information from samples in the lab, I was developing a comprehensive understanding of advancing conservation research. 
​By the time I boarded my flight back to Berkeley, my planetary ambitions and personal pursuits had been perennially fortified in the forests of Madagascar. Every connection and curiosity inscribed by Madagascar underscored my resolve and urgency to effectuate critical conservation action. I was overcome by an immensity of gratitude and a profound sense of obligation. The last three months had imbued a steadfast faithfulness and a fierce loyalty to the ecosystem in which we had surrounded our lives for the last three months. Every lemur became kin, every team member an ally, every lab mate a teacher. Each moment in the forest and lab was saturated with a profound sense of meaning and duty. Every lemur follow and data entry carried the weight of the whole species. Living and operating with such thoughtfulness and allegiance is the paramount lesson I will imprint into the futurity of my professional ambitions and personal crusades.
Picture

Field notes #9

8/11/2023

 

My Forest Adventure: Ten Weeks of Discovery and Learning ​

Text by Diary Randriamora, a Malagasy student who spent last summer working with our research group in Ranomafana through the National Geographic Society's STEM Field Assistant Mentorship program
I spent ten weeks in the rainforest of Ranomafana, Madagascar, working on a research project about lemurs and their environment. It was an amazing experience that I will never forget. In this text, I will share some of the highlights and challenges of my forest adventure.
One of the challenges I faced was communicating in English with the American researchers who were part of the project. English is not my native language, and I was not very fluent in it. However, I didn’t give up and tried to learn from them. They were very patient and supportive, and they helped me improve my language skills. As a Malagasy proverb says, “tsy misy mafy tsy laitry ny zoto”. (lit. meaning: nothing is hard with diligence). 
Picture
Diary in the rainforest of Ranomafana National Park
Working in a rainforest that rains a lot is itself also very challenging. One day, we had a heavy rainstorm on our way to our campsite in Valohoaka. The rain was so strong that it soaked my rain boots and made my feet swell. I also had many leeches stuck to my feet, which was very unpleasant. But I did not let that ruin my mood, because I knew that rain was essential for this tropical forest ecosystem. I embraced the adventure and enjoyed every moment!
Picture
Diary holding a red-fronted brown lemur
One of the things I enjoyed the most was watching lemur captures and holding three different species of lemurs: Eulemur rubriventer, E. ruffifrons and Varecia variegata editorium (my favorite!), as a team of veterinarian and technicians checked their health and put GPS collars on them. It was the first time in my life that I touched a lemur, and I felt a strong connection with these amazing animals.
I also enjoyed following and observing the lemurs’ daily activities every day. I learned a lot about their behavior, diet, social interactions, and adaptations to the forest environment. Sometimes they would run away too far and I would lose sight of them, but that was part of their natural instincts. I also appreciated the opportunity to discuss scientific articles with my mentor Dr. Razafindratsima and another student participating in the research program; such healthy discussions helped me get a better understanding of various ecological concepts and think about future research.
Picture
Diary surveying seedlings under a seed trap
I came home feeling inspired and ready to go on the next adventure. One of the things that inspired me the most was the story that my mentor shared with us about her experiences and how she achieved her goals as a researcher. She also gave me valuable advice and feedback, improving my research skills.
Picture
Diary watching lemurs in Ranomafana NP
I also participated in a new project that the lab set-up to gain a better understanding of plant-frugivore interactions in the system. This project involved both field work and lab work. It was also the first time that I did some practical lab work, such as using a pipette to measure samples. I was nervous at first, but Dr. Tonos, who also mentored and trained me along with Dr. Razafindratsima, was very helpful and encouraging.
Picture
I have a message for those who love research like me: don’t be afraid to try something you like and see as beneficial for you because there is always a good way behind adventure. Be determined to achieve your goals and don’t let them be just dreams!

Field note #8

8/3/2023

 

Madagascar field updates summer 2023

​Text by Onja H. Razafindratsima 
This year, we decided to deploy a couple of GPS collars on the three large-bodied frugivorous lemur species in Ranomafana National Park to get a better sense of their movement patterns and activities. We worked with a team of experts in capturing and handling lemurs led by DVM Haja Rakotondrainibe. These GPS collars will allow us to investigate how lemur movement and foraging patterns change across seasons with varying fruit availability. I have been studying lemur ecology for more than a decade and this was the first that I got up close to my study species in their natural environment. It was exhilarating!  
Picture
Onja with a black-and-white ruffed lemur
Picture
Dr. Haja Rakotondrainibe checking the vitals of a lemur before putting the GPS collar
Picture
Hasina using a tracking device to locate the collared lemurs
In addition to collaring lemurs and continuing our research on lemur movement, foraging and their role in seed dispersal in Ranomafana, we also set-up a new project that uses genetics and seed traps to try to gain a better understanding of frugivore-plant interactions in this system. This approach allows us to determine what animals consumed and dispersed a seed to a given location, without the need to be present to observe the event.
Picture
CVB technician Georges Razafindrakoto surveying seedlings under the seed traps
After spending quite some time in Ranomafana, I then joined my mentees in Ihofa, in the eastern part of Madagascar to check on their projects. I enjoyed very much the visit!  
Picture
Field team in Ihofa
Picture
Lunch with lab members and collaborators in Antananarivo. Some of us went to the field the next day, others went back home.
Some pictures from the field can be found in this link. 
<<Previous

    We're using this space to share updates on our adventures in the field.

    Archives

    December 2024
    May 2024
    March 2024
    November 2023
    October 2023
    August 2023
    September 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    July 2021
    June 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021

    Categories

    All
    Baobab
    Fieldwork
    FieldworkFail
    Ihofa
    Kianjavato
    Lemurs
    Madagascar
    Malagasy
    Marojejy
    Menabe
    Ranomafana
    Students

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly
  • Home
  • Research
    • Research Overview
    • Frugivory, Movement and Seed Dispersal
    • Ecological changes
    • Conservation & Management
  • Publications
    • Opinion pieces & Editorial articles
    • Scientific Articles
    • Published data
  • People
    • PI Razafindratsima
    • Postdocs & Students >
      • @ Cal
      • Affiliates
    • Past lab members & visitors
    • Field teams
  • Field updates
  • Outreach
  • Join Us
    • Call for applications MS
  • Useful Links
    • Fellowship resources
    • Research in Madagascar
  • Group news
  • Adventures
  • Affiliates