I
recently finished reading Peter Matthiessen’s African Silences (1992). Though
it is less celebrated than some of his other books, for instance, The Tree Where Man was Born (1973), The Snow Leopard (1978) or his National
Book Award winning novel Shadow Country (2008),
nevertheless, it covers essential territory and twenty years after its publication
it still deserves to be read.
African Silences examines a crucial conservation topic, demonstrates the pernicious impacts of humans on dwindling habitat, reveals a slightly fetishized awe of vast empty places, describes the vertiginous horrors of several potential wilderness deaths, applauds the merits of the old ways and traditional peoples, curses bureaucracies, casts its few crumbs of optimism along the way like edible markers on a dark path, and concludes prettily but gloomily. Of course, it is tremendously depressing. Which taken altogether is all to say that African Silences is an environmental classic.
African Silences examines a crucial conservation topic, demonstrates the pernicious impacts of humans on dwindling habitat, reveals a slightly fetishized awe of vast empty places, describes the vertiginous horrors of several potential wilderness deaths, applauds the merits of the old ways and traditional peoples, curses bureaucracies, casts its few crumbs of optimism along the way like edible markers on a dark path, and concludes prettily but gloomily. Of course, it is tremendously depressing. Which taken altogether is all to say that African Silences is an environmental classic.
African Silences covers three separate African trips. The first was to Senegal, Gambia and Ivory
Coast in 1978 on a wildlife survey of West Africa with Dr Gilbert Boese, then
of Brookfield Zoo in Chicago. They
conclude that animals are fewer in both abundance and diversity than in East
Africa. Though this has long been known,
of course, but Matthiessen points out that West Africa is not only more
populous than East Africa but that this has been true for a long time. Therefore he speculates that long-term human
impacts may be a factor explaining the depauperate state of Western Africa’s
fauna. The second trip was to Zaire (now
the Democratic Republic of the Congo) in 1978 with British ornithologist Alec Forbes
–Watson in search of the Congo Peacock (Afropavo
congensis). Though they see the Eastern
Lowland Gorilla in Kahuzi-Biega National Park, and later meet someone who has
eaten a Congo peacock, Matthiessen nevertheless leaves without seeing this bird.
The final trip reported on in the book
is to the Congo Basin to evaluate elephant populations, the size of which was a
contentious matter back then, with Dr David Western. They concluded that vast areas of forest in
south Gabon, south Congo and western Zaire thought to harbor populations of forest
elephants have disappeared. That is, the
whole forest has disappeared – destroyed or degraded. Another observation is that there exists a
wide and deep hybridization zone between forest and bush elephants. Finally, they speculate that rumors of “pygmy
elephants” in the forest are more likely to refer to independent juveniles
rather than to a separate undescribed tiny elephant species.