what s left of a bird paradise?

1
What’s left of a bird paradise? birds for Chapman, who was thrilled. On a morning in early August, a cen- tury and nine years after Miller loaded his specimens onto river rafts and com- menced his return to New York, a group of researchers tramped through muddy fields to their base camp, a ranch in a ru- ral outpost of the city of Florencia. The team, led by Andrés Cuervo, an ornithologist at Universidad Nacional in Bogotá, has organized six expeditions across Colombia, collecting birds and data for comparison with Chapman’s; this was the fifth. The undertaking, called Alas, Cantos y Colores — Wings, Songs and Colors — is financed by the Colombian government, with the par- Miller was working for Frank Chap- man, the celebrated curator of birds at the museum. Chapman suspected that Colombia’s wildly varied topography had given rise to an unusual density of species, and he sent collectors like Miller to bring him birds from all cor- ners of the country to study. Miller set up camp on a farmstead called La Morelia, surrounded by what he described to his mentor as “a perfect ocean of forest stretching out ahead as far as the eye can see.” There, he and his Colombian assist- ants worked day and night, beleaguered by rain, malaria and insects. By the end of July, they had collected more than 800 In June 1912, Leo Miller, a collector with the American Museum of Natural His- tory, arrived in the Caquetá region of Co- lombia, where the eastern foothills of the Andes melt into the forested low- lands of the Amazon basin. ticipation of research institutions in Co- lombia and the United States. Studies of species from the same place over long periods of time are rare in science, and this resurvey project stands to speak volumes about how tropical birds have responded to changes in land use and climate. A lot has changed in this part of Ca- quetá since 1912. For one, the “ocean of forest” has been reduced, after decades of expanded cattle grazing, to mere is- lands in a sea of pasture. Before arriv- ing, the researchers had pored through satellite images in the hope of finding a forest big enough to sustain the kind of BIRDS, PAGE 6 Above, from left, Andrés Cuervo, Juliana Soto, Jessica Díaz and Andrea Morales Rozo, members of the expedition Alas, Cantos y Colores (Wings, Songs and Colors), in a forest near Morelia, Colombia. Top left, Nelsy Niño of Colombia’s Instituto Humboldt with a pair of Lafresnaye’s piculets, tiny tropical woodpeckers; top right, a many-banded aracari. PHOTOGRAPHS BY FEDERICO RIOS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES FLORENCIA, COLOMBIA 109 years after a study of Colombia’s avian fauna, a new survey takes stock BY JENNIE ERIN SMITH .. INTERNATIONAL EDITION | TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2021 ROCKY ESCAPES CHAOS AWAITS MANY AFGHANS PAGE 3 | WORLD WRITER’S TOUCH HE WILL TACKLE THE HARD TOPICS PAGE 18 | CULTURE SUMMER IN A JAR PRESERVING JAMS AND JELLIES IN PEAK SEASON BACK PAGE | LIVING The plan, to repatriate the skeleton of a Napoleonic general who died on a Rus- sian battlefield two centuries ago, was supposed to bring together the leaders of two nations long at odds. The remains of Gen. Charles Étienne Gudin, who was killed in action in 1812 during Napoleon’s invasion of Russia, would be flown home with official pomp, and President Emmanuel Macron of France would host his Russian counter- part, Vladimir V. Putin, for a funeral that would serve as a symbolic burying of the hatchet. Instead, General Gudin’s return to French soil on July 13 was far more low- key: His coffin was flown in on a private plane chartered by a Russian oligarch and was welcomed with a small ceremo- ny in a grim hangar at Le Bourget air- port, near Paris, next to a decommis- sioned Concorde jet. The presidents were nowhere in sight. “It was not the repatriation that was originally conceived,” said Hélène Car- rère d’Encausse, a French historian of Russia. Once seen as an opportunity to lever- age history for diplomatic purposes, the plan was eventually sunk by France’s unwillingness to countenance Russia’s increasingly tough domestic and foreign policies. The unraveling of the project also spoke to the peculiar relationship between France and Russia, shaped by a complicated shared history filled with shadowy intermediaries and backdoor diplomacy. General Gudin’s case, Ms. Carrère d’Encausse said, “reveals the complex- ity, the difficulty for France in this French-Russian relationship.” A favorite of Napoleon, General Gudin distinguished himself in battle before FRANCE, PAGE 2 A Napoleonic skeleton for diplomacy A ceremony in June in Moscow commemorating the transfer of Gen. Charles Étienne Gudin’s remains to France from Russia. The Napoleonic general died in 1812. ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE — GETTY IMAGES LE BOURGET, FRANCE Plan to repatriate remains of a general fails to heal Franco-Russian relations BY CONSTANT MÉHEUT The New York Times publishes opinion from a wide range of perspectives in hopes of promoting constructive debate about consequential questions. The nights were the hardest. From the moment Medardo Mairena decided to run for president, in direct challenge to Nicaragua’s authoritarian leader, he was certain the security appa- ratus would eventually come for him. Over the summer, he watched as other opposition leaders disappeared. One by one, they were dragged from their homes amid a nationwide crack- down on dissent by the president, Dan- iel Ortega, whose quest to secure a fourth term had plunged the Central American nation into a state of perva- sive fear. Since June, the police have jailed or put under house arrest seven candi- dates in November’s presidential elec- tion and dozens of political activists and civil society leaders, leaving Mr. Ortega running on a ballot devoid of any credi- ble challenger and turning Nicaragua into a police state. Mr. Mairena himself was barred from leaving Managua. Police patrols outside his house had scared away nearly all visitors, even his family. During the day, Mr. Mairena kept busy, campaigning over Zoom and scan- ning official radio announcements for clues to the growing repression. But at night he lay awake, listening for sirens, certain that sooner or later the police would come and he would disappear into a prison cell. “The first thing I ask myself in the morning is, when are they coming for me?” Mr. Mairena, a farmers’ rights ac- tivist, said in a telephone interview in late June. “It’s a life in constant dread.” His turn came just days after the call. Heavily armed officers raided his home and took him away late on July 5. He had not been heard from until last Wednesday, when relatives were al- lowed one brief visit. They said they found him emaciated and sick, com- pletely disconnected from the outside world. Government critics say the unpre- dictability and speed of the arrests have turned Nicaragua into a more repres- sive state than it was during the early years of the dictatorship of Anastasio Somoza, who was overthrown in 1979 by the Sandinista Revolutionary Move- ment led by Mr. Ortega and several other commanders. The Sandinistas governed the country until losing demo- cratic elections and ceding power in 1990. In 2007, Mr. Ortega returned as president. After 14 years in power, unpopular NICARAGUA, PAGE 4 Fear grips Nicaragua as it veers into dictatorship MANAGUA, NICARAGUA President has civic leaders and political opponents arrested as election nears BY YUBELKA MENDOZA, ANATOLY KURMANAEV AND ALFONSO FLORES BERMÚDEZ CARACAS, VENEZUELA A few years ago, Venezuela was experiencing such devastating food shortages that people stood for hours in lines just for a chance to buy basic staples. Venezue- lans reported losing an average of 24 pounds in 2017. Today, such hard times feel like a distant nightmare. People can now buy groceries, medi- cations and other goods that for nearly a decade were impossible to find, thanks to the informal dollarization of the economy and the partial lifting of price controls and import tariffs by President Nicolás Maduro’s govern- ment. After years of deprivation, near economic collapse and political chaos, this shift has improved the quality of life for many people across Venezuela. Using the dollar instead of the local currency, the bolívar, has its drawbacks, but it has brought fragile stability, for now. Venezuelans spon- taneously began to adopt the dollar in 2019 as a way of fending off hyper- inflation. American dollars, and other foreign currencies like the euro and the Colombian peso, have breathed some life into the production of rum and the collapsing oil industry. Steve Hanke, an economist at Johns Hopkins University and an expert on hyperinflation, told me that dollariza- tion, even if it is improvised, rather than an official policy, can help people “protect themselves from the ravages of the bolívar’s hyperinflation.” In the case of Zimbabwe, making the U.S. dollar the official currency in 2009 brought the economy back from the brink. In Venezuela, nearly 70 percent of all transactions were conducted in that currency as of June, according to Luis Vicente León, a pollster in Caracas. About 60 percent of those purchases were in cash and the rest using wire transfers or online payment systems like Zelle and Venmo. More than five million people, or over 15 percent of the population, have fled Venezuela in recent years. That translates into greater access to dol- lars in the country, since many Vene- zuelans abroad send money to their families back home. In fact, before the pandemic, remittances had been ris- ing. In 2019, the diaspora sent an esti- mated $3.7 billion to relatives, up from the $3.5 billion sent the year before. An economy of lettuce in Venezuela Virginia López Glass OPINION After years of deprivations, an informal trade in U.S. dollars is allowing people to buy groceries and medication. LÓPEZ GLASS, PAGE 15 Y(1J85IC*KKOKKR( +$!z!$!@!. Issue Number No. 43,070 Andorra € 5.00 Antilles € 4.50 Austria € 4.00 Belgium € 4.00 Bos. & Herz. KM 5.80 Britain £ 2.60 Cameroon CFA 3000 Croatia KN 24.00 Cyprus € 3.40 Czech Rep CZK 115 Denmark Dkr 37 Estonia € 4.00 Finland € 4.00 France € 4.00 Gabon CFA 3000 Germany € 4.00 Greece € 3.40 Hungary HUF 1100 Israel NIS 14.00/ Friday 27.50 Israel / Eilat NIS 12.00/ Friday 23.50 Italy € 3.80 Ivory Coast CFA 3000 Sweden Skr 50 Switzerland CHF 5.20 Syria US$ 3.00 The Netherlands € 4.00 Tunisia Din 8.00 Turkey TL 22 Poland Zl 19 Portugal € 3.90 Republic of Ireland 3.80 Serbia Din 300 Slovenia € 3.40 Spain € 3.90 Luxembourg € 4.00 Malta € 3.80 Montenegro € 3.40 Morocco MAD 35 Norway Nkr 40 Oman OMR 1.50 NEWSSTAND PRICES U.A.E. AED 15.00 United States Military (Europe) $ 2.30

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Page 1: What s left of a bird paradise?

What’s left of a bird paradise?

birds for Chapman, who was thrilled.On a morning in early August, a cen-

tury and nine years after Miller loadedhis specimens onto river rafts and com-menced his return to New York, a groupof researchers tramped through muddyfields to their base camp, a ranch in a ru-ral outpost of the city of Florencia.

The team, led by Andrés Cuervo, anornithologist at Universidad Nacional inBogotá, has organized six expeditionsacross Colombia, collecting birds anddata for comparison with Chapman’s;this was the fifth. The undertaking,called Alas, Cantos y Colores — Wings,Songs and Colors — is financed by theColombian government, with the par-

Miller was working for Frank Chap-man, the celebrated curator of birds atthe museum. Chapman suspected thatColombia’s wildly varied topographyhad given rise to an unusual density ofspecies, and he sent collectors likeMiller to bring him birds from all cor-ners of the country to study.

Miller set up camp on a farmsteadcalled La Morelia, surrounded by whathe described to his mentor as “a perfectocean of forest stretching out ahead asfar as the eye can see.”

There, he and his Colombian assist-ants worked day and night, beleagueredby rain, malaria and insects. By the endof July, they had collected more than 800

In June 1912, Leo Miller, a collector withthe American Museum of Natural His-tory, arrived in the Caquetá region of Co-lombia, where the eastern foothills ofthe Andes melt into the forested low-lands of the Amazon basin.

ticipation of research institutions in Co-lombia and the United States. Studies ofspecies from the same place over longperiods of time are rare in science, andthis resurvey project stands to speakvolumes about how tropical birds haveresponded to changes in land use andclimate.

A lot has changed in this part of Ca-quetá since 1912. For one, the “ocean offorest” has been reduced, after decadesof expanded cattle grazing, to mere is-lands in a sea of pasture. Before arriv-ing, the researchers had pored throughsatellite images in the hope of finding aforest big enough to sustain the kind of BIRDS, PAGE 6

Above, from left, Andrés Cuervo, Juliana Soto, Jessica Díaz and Andrea Morales Rozo, members of the expedition Alas, Cantos y Colores (Wings, Songs and Colors), in a forest nearMorelia, Colombia. Top left, Nelsy Niño of Colombia’s Instituto Humboldt with a pair of Lafresnaye’s piculets, tiny tropical woodpeckers; top right, a many-banded aracari.

PHOTOGRAPHS BY FEDERICO RIOS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

FLORENCIA, COLOMBIA

109 years after a studyof Colombia’s avian fauna,a new survey takes stock

BY JENNIE ERIN SMITH

..

INTERNATIONAL EDITION | TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2021

ROCKY ESCAPESCHAOS AWAITSMANY AFGHANSPAGE 3 | WORLD

WRITER’S TOUCHHE WILL TACKLETHE HARD TOPICSPAGE 18 | CULTURE

SUMMER IN A JARPRESERVING JAMS ANDJELLIES IN PEAK SEASONBACK PAGE | LIVING

The plan, to repatriate the skeleton of aNapoleonic general who died on a Rus-sian battlefield two centuries ago, wassupposed to bring together the leadersof two nations long at odds.

The remains of Gen. Charles ÉtienneGudin, who was killed in action in 1812during Napoleon’s invasion of Russia,would be flown home with official pomp,and President Emmanuel Macron ofFrance would host his Russian counter-part, Vladimir V. Putin, for a funeral thatwould serve as a symbolic burying of thehatchet.

Instead, General Gudin’s return toFrench soil on July 13 was far more low-key: His coffin was flown in on a private

plane chartered by a Russian oligarchand was welcomed with a small ceremo-ny in a grim hangar at Le Bourget air-port, near Paris, next to a decommis-sioned Concorde jet. The presidentswere nowhere in sight.

“It was not the repatriation that wasoriginally conceived,” said Hélène Car-rère d’Encausse, a French historian ofRussia.

Once seen as an opportunity to lever-age history for diplomatic purposes, theplan was eventually sunk by France’sunwillingness to countenance Russia’sincreasingly tough domestic and foreignpolicies. The unraveling of the projectalso spoke to the peculiar relationshipbetween France and Russia, shaped bya complicated shared history filled withshadowy intermediaries and backdoordiplomacy.

General Gudin’s case, Ms. Carrèred’Encausse said, “reveals the complex-ity, the difficulty for France in thisFrench-Russian relationship.”

A favorite of Napoleon, General Gudindistinguished himself in battle before FRANCE, PAGE 2

A Napoleonic skeleton for diplomacy

A ceremony in June in Moscow commemorating the transfer of Gen. Charles ÉtienneGudin’s remains to France from Russia. The Napoleonic general died in 1812.

ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE — GETTY IMAGES

LE BOURGET, FRANCE

Plan to repatriate remainsof a general fails to healFranco-Russian relations

BY CONSTANT MÉHEUT

The New York Times publishes opinionfrom a wide range of perspectives inhopes of promoting constructive debateabout consequential questions.

The nights were the hardest.From the moment Medardo Mairena

decided to run for president, in directchallenge to Nicaragua’s authoritarianleader, he was certain the security appa-ratus would eventually come for him.

Over the summer, he watched asother opposition leaders disappeared.One by one, they were dragged fromtheir homes amid a nationwide crack-down on dissent by the president, Dan-iel Ortega, whose quest to secure afourth term had plunged the CentralAmerican nation into a state of perva-sive fear.

Since June, the police have jailed orput under house arrest seven candi-dates in November’s presidential elec-tion and dozens of political activists andcivil society leaders, leaving Mr. Ortegarunning on a ballot devoid of any credi-ble challenger and turning Nicaraguainto a police state.

Mr. Mairena himself was barred fromleaving Managua. Police patrols outsidehis house had scared away nearly allvisitors, even his family.

During the day, Mr. Mairena keptbusy, campaigning over Zoom and scan-ning official radio announcements forclues to the growing repression. But atnight he lay awake, listening for sirens,certain that sooner or later the policewould come and he would disappearinto a prison cell.

“The first thing I ask myself in themorning is, when are they coming forme?” Mr. Mairena, a farmers’ rights ac-tivist, said in a telephone interview inlate June. “It’s a life in constant dread.”

His turn came just days after the call.Heavily armed officers raided his homeand took him away late on July 5.

He had not been heard from until lastWednesday, when relatives were al-lowed one brief visit. They said theyfound him emaciated and sick, com-pletely disconnected from the outsideworld.

Government critics say the unpre-dictability and speed of the arrests haveturned Nicaragua into a more repres-sive state than it was during the earlyyears of the dictatorship of AnastasioSomoza, who was overthrown in 1979 bythe Sandinista Revolutionary Move-ment led by Mr. Ortega and severalother commanders. The Sandinistasgoverned the country until losing demo-cratic elections and ceding power in1990. In 2007, Mr. Ortega returned aspresident.

After 14 years in power, unpopular NICARAGUA, PAGE 4

Fear grips Nicaragua asit veers intodictatorshipMANAGUA, NICARAGUA

President has civic leadersand political opponents arrested as election nears

BY YUBELKA MENDOZA,ANATOLY KURMANAEVAND ALFONSO FLORES BERMÚDEZ

CARACAS, VENEZUELA A few years ago,Venezuela was experiencing suchdevastating food shortages that peoplestood for hours in lines just for achance to buy basic staples. Venezue-lans reported losing an average of 24pounds in 2017. Today, such hard timesfeel like a distant nightmare.

People can now buy groceries, medi-cations and other goods that for nearlya decade were impossible to find,thanks to the informal dollarization ofthe economy and the partial lifting ofprice controls and import tariffs byPresident Nicolás Maduro’s govern-ment. After years of deprivation, neareconomic collapse and political chaos,this shift has improved the quality of

life for many peopleacross Venezuela.Using the dollarinstead of the localcurrency, the bolívar,has its drawbacks,but it has broughtfragile stability, fornow.

Venezuelans spon-taneously began toadopt the dollar in2019 as a way offending off hyper-

inflation. American dollars, and otherforeign currencies like the euro and theColombian peso, have breathed somelife into the production of rum and thecollapsing oil industry.

Steve Hanke, an economist at JohnsHopkins University and an expert onhyperinflation, told me that dollariza-tion, even if it is improvised, ratherthan an official policy, can help people“protect themselves from the ravagesof the bolívar’s hyperinflation.” In thecase of Zimbabwe, making the U.S.dollar the official currency in 2009brought the economy back from thebrink.

In Venezuela, nearly 70 percent of alltransactions were conducted in thatcurrency as of June, according to LuisVicente León, a pollster in Caracas.About 60 percent of those purchaseswere in cash and the rest using wiretransfers or online payment systemslike Zelle and Venmo.

More than five million people, orover 15 percent of the population, havefled Venezuela in recent years. Thattranslates into greater access to dol-lars in the country, since many Vene-zuelans abroad send money to theirfamilies back home. In fact, before thepandemic, remittances had been ris-ing. In 2019, the diaspora sent an esti-mated $3.7 billion to relatives, up fromthe $3.5 billion sent the year before.

An economyof lettuce inVenezuelaVirginia López Glass

OPINION

After years ofdeprivations,an informaltrade in U.S.dollars isallowingpeople to buygroceries andmedication.

LÓPEZ GLASS, PAGE 15

Sharpen employee perspective.Empower forward thinking.

Provide a companywide subscription to The Times.Learn more at nytimes.com/companywide.

Y(1J85IC*KKOKKR( +$!z!$!@!.

Issue NumberNo. 43,070Andorra € 5.00

Antilles € 4.50Austria € 4.00Belgium € 4.00Bos. & Herz. KM 5.80Britain £ 2.60

Cameroon CFA 3000Croatia KN 24.00Cyprus € 3.40Czech Rep CZK 115Denmark Dkr 37Estonia € 4.00

Finland € 4.00France € 4.00Gabon CFA 3000Germany € 4.00Greece € 3.40Hungary HUF 1100

Israel NIS 14.00/Friday 27.50

Israel / Eilat NIS 12.00/ Friday 23.50

Italy € 3.80Ivory Coast CFA 3000

Sweden Skr 50Switzerland CHF 5.20Syria US$ 3.00The Netherlands € 4.00Tunisia Din 8.00Turkey TL 22

Poland Zl 19Portugal € 3.90Republic of Ireland ¤� 3.80Serbia Din 300Slovenia € 3.40Spain € 3.90

Luxembourg € 4.00Malta € 3.80Montenegro € 3.40Morocco MAD 35Norway Nkr 40Oman OMR 1.50

NEWSSTAND PRICES

U.A.E. AED 15.00United States Military

(Europe) $ 2.30