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tv   Mabu  BBC News  January 4, 2025 3:30am-4:00am GMT

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in a world where nature is under relentless attack, there are still places that have been left untouched. this is about as good as it gets. the forest is in excellent condition. the water is crystal clear. mount mabu is an isolated patch of rainforest, almost like an island. this isolation has meant that the animals that live here have evolved uniquely. inaccessible for decades due to war, it's only now that scientists are discovering mount mabu's secrets. sh—sh—sh—sh—sh—sh. wow, that is amazing! this is a bicyclus butterfly. this is a nadzikambia baylissi, which is only found on mount. mabu.
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mabu forest is quite special for beetles. i collected ten species. half of them were new to science. these ones could be a new species, we hope. it's amazing! will proving what lives here in this forest is unique be enough to secure mount mabu's protection? limbue, northern mozambique, familiar territory for professorjulian bayliss. it's nearly 20 years since he first came here, having worked out from satellite images that there could be a hidden rainforest on top of mount mabu. the relative size of the forest compared to what's left in southern africa, i think, was the discovery. not that it was never seen or known by humankind before because obviously, the local people were here and they're
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hunting in it. what was your reaction at that point? oh, my god. i mean, what have we discovered here? this is phenomenal that we found the largest rainforest forest in southern africa. since then, professor bayliss has been leading expeditions of scientists into mabu, trying to gather evidence to justify the forest�*s protection. there's only a limited amount of resources available to try and protect places, and somehow and some way, you've got to try and, unfortunately, rank them in terms of importance. the more new species we can find, the greater the justification to try and protect the places like mabu. this one. wait, wait. we were invited to join professor bayliss on one of his biggest and most ambitious expeditions yet. no scientists have ever been into the centre of this forest. we'd be the first group — 25 people strong, national and international scientists —
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going into the centre of mabu forest and we're going to find new species. yeah. get that duct tape over there. getting there is quite an operation. once you drive into the village — the end of the road, if you like — and that's where the vehicles stop, everything gets unpacked from the vehicles. the villagers come out, we talk to the chiefs. they show us their traditional ceremony where they call to the spirits of the forest and they ask the spirits of the forest to grant us access and also, to grant us safe passage and look after us while we're in the forest. in this occasion, we had 64 porters. everything is being carried. everything is on top of their heads. everything is on foot. there is very little difference between what happens from those vehicles onwards to, you know, to what was happening 100 years ago or 150 years ago. even with our equipment being carried by porters, the walk in, straight up
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the side of the mountain to the centre of the forest is tough, as our cameraman quickly discovered. how is it, tony? yeah... pants. any regrets? quite a few, actually! where do you want to start? it looks like we're probably not going to get to the camp until after dark. that's just the first step towards getting into the middle of this forest. day turned into night and, after eight hours of walking, we and the scientists staggered into the first base camp on the edge of the forest. oh, my lord! i was dying, my love! i know. i said all the time to everyone that i was feeling sorry for you. laughter. just a day in and mount mabu was already showing her tough and special sides.
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i was just walking and i spotted, it was like 4m up in — in a small vine. it's a chameleon which is only found on mount mabu. there is a couple of other species of the same genus which are found on other neighbouring mountains. each mountain basically has its own and this one has been named afterjulian bayliss, so it's called nadzikambia baylissi. it's a tree chameleon, so hence the long tail. the long tail, yeah. the next morning, the porters, the scientists and us were on our way again to our final destination, 1,400m above sea level. welcome to the centre of mabu forest. welcome to the heart of mabu forest. this is about as good as it gets. the forest is in excellent condition. the water is crystal clear — beautiful for drinking and washing. this is going to be the base for the next ten days,
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something like that, where we're going to survey the biology, the ecology, the plants, the animals. these are collectively known as islands in the sky and they're high—altitude mountains with pockets of wet forest found at a high altitude near their summits. because they've been isolated and separated for a very long time, the plants and animals we found inside them have had plenty of time to speciate and become endemic, and become new and not found anywhere else in the world. amongst the group are a small team of bird experts. they've come here with a very specific mission. pop! we're headed to the very highest parts of the mountain looking for what is one of africa's rarest birds, and a bird whose very existence is threatened by climate change. its name — the namuli apalis.
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a yellow belly, a black breast. this beautiful, olive—green wing, and a inquisitive, rather currently rather angry pale whitish eye. so, this is the first—ever photo that was taken back in 1998. exactly, yes. and here is a painting done by my colleague jess lund of the same species which really beautifully captures its slightly imperious nature. yeah, it looks quite a character. it is! that's perhaps why it's so hard to find. the namuli apalis lives only at high altitudes and right up in the canopy, so finding any trace of it from the ground is quite an effort. we've got pre—recorded calls of the bird from previous expeditions from the namuli and we're going to play the male territorial song and even a male and female duet. and if there are any namuli apalis here, sometimes they will respond. birdsong plays.
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sometimes even when they're with the flock, they may show some curiosity, they might give a burst of call, just to announce their presence. they may come have a look. so, the hope is that the namuli apalis will hear what you're playing on your iphone and your bluetooth speaker... yes. ..and come and check it out because they think it might be... exactly. ..a mate or something. exactly. birdsong. did you hear what's happening there? so, one of its related species is probably calling in response because the calls sound a little bit similar and often, if they hear a similar—sounding call, they'll often call back. but that's a black—headed apalis calling, not the namuli. you can tell that just by listening? yeah, yeah. you've got a very trained ear! well, this is, yeah — we've got a lot of experience with these species, so it takes a long time to get to that point. psh—psh—psh—psh—psh. so, i'm doing this noise because a lot of birds find it — it almost sounds a bit like a bird alarm call. it's in a similar tonal range,
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and so birds often find it interesting to come and look at or they think it's another bird alarming. psh—psh—psh—psh—psh. with the namuli apalis only found on one other mountain, the fear is that a combination of deforestation and rising temperatures are pushing the apalis ever higher towards possible extinction. the climate change often has these effects that are hard to predict. so, for example, birds that like cold habitats, like, why do they like cold habitats? do they do they like to be cold? you know, does their metabolism work better in a cooler climate? but there could be other effects. like, for example, we found in another study around cape town with a threatened species where the warmer habitats actually seem to encourage snake activity and those snakes predate the nests, so the birds seem to be faring really poorly in areas where the climate seems to be warming. so, i might need to de—ant in a minute. as we hack our way through the forest, we come under attack by millions of red ants.
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i'm afraid i'm totally anted up. so, just get rid of them quickly. ooh! oh, my word, millions! the only way to deal with it is to pull your trousers down and try to find them. no, we didn't stand out on a nest, they're hunting insects... argh! excuse me, we might have to edit that bit. but they — they're hunting insects and they're moving in a big trail and as the insects move ahead, they grab them like grasshoppers and crickets, and they eat them or take them back to the nest. not for the first time on this trip, the bird experts returned to camp with no sign of the namuli apalis. in the river by our tents, this mozambican scientist was having better luck. i'm erica tovela, a marine biologist. i'm fascinated by freshwater fishes. erica brought to mabu a collection of traps and nets. she says she's confident that one of the fish she caught hasn't been seen
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by scientists before. so we have, like, the same genus, but probably for these ones could be a new species, we hope. so we already took samples for genetics and we will do morphometrics, too, and try to compare to the other ones, describe it. what is it about the fish that you found that makes you think that it might be a new species? ok, the first thing is just the area, like, it's very, very high. when we're trying to follow the features, something was a little bit different because for this area, we have two species and some of them was really different from the two ones that we have. so, you think it's a possibility it's different? yes, because i was sharing this information with one of the experts for this group and they said, "ok, this is amphilius, for sure" but i think that it's something new for science and i hope that we have a new
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species for this area. it's very exciting. amazing! amazing — will be the first fish for me. will you get to choose what it's called? it should be something mabuensis — amphilius mabuensis — because you have many things... mabuensis is for mabu? for mabu, yeah, yeah. 0k. and it will be a very nice way of saying that we have at least one specific species that is from mabu. well, congratulations. thank you. that's brilliant. thank you. as well as leading the expedition, professor bayliss loves a flutter. butterflies is my passion. that's the first group that i started looking at at the age of seven. i got two there. if you're a butterfly specialist, if you're a butterfly enthusiast, you go searching for special butterflies that may or may not be there and that gives you that extra
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energy to go that one step further, and that one step further takes you into a different world of exploration. you make it to the top of the peaks, you make it over the ridge, you make it into the valley bottoms just to see what's there and what you can find. and you've found quite a few new species here? yes, i have, yeah, yeah. i think we've got about 10, 12 -10-15, including subspecies. and some of them are around here now? yeah, that sounds like a charaxes in there. let's go and have a look. that is a charaxes. where's it going? it's looping. there it is — there it is. 0k, wait. this is a female cymothoe butterfly — one of the new ones that we found a few years ago. it's a montane glider in common english. cymothoe poppyana, baylissi poppyana. and baylissi poppyana — it's not just your surname, is it? no, poppy is the name of my daughter, so this one is named
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after my daughter. it wasn't named by me — it was named by some other butterfly enthusiasts. generally, when new species are found, they're named after the place or often people. so, we have quite a few mabuensis. like in a new leaf—nosed bat that we discovered, called rhinolophus mabuensis. on this occasion, this new butterfly was named after my daughter, poppy — poppyana. though the forest itself has changed very little over the years, unfortunately, the same can't be said for the animals that live in it. should we put one trap or two traps on this tree? two, maybe. no, please don't feel like tarzan — we need you alive. so, there was a whole community of large mammals in the region, in and around mount mabu, probably all the way up until the civil war in the �*70s.
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the lions, rhinos, buffalo, antelope of all kinds, predators. mouse in bag... mouse in bag. ..is 41. 41 grams. so, large mammals were heavily harvested during the war for food and as a result, the large mammal populations crashed throughout the country everywhere. there are some mammals that are unique to mount mabu. well, there's one mammal in particular — there's a species of horseshoe bat that goes by the scientific name of rhinolophus mabuensis. we've discovered also a new species of shrew from mount mabu that we recorded a couple of years ago. we're still busy analysing it and we will eventually describe it. it will be a new species of mammal. so, from a biodiversity point of view, mount mabu is very important because we just don't get those species anywhere else in the world.
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laughter. you've frightened her, julian. i'm not surprised. laughter. as we walk through mabu, we see evidence of how the local villagers still use the forest. we just come across what's known as a gin trap. this is used by local hunters, and the idea behind it is that these extremely sharp teeth snap onto the legs of an animal when it walks through the trap. the basic idea is that this catches the animal, holds it in place, keeps it alive — in excruciating pain — until the hunters come round, maybe several days later, to collect it. we go with professor bayliss to retrieve a camera trap he left strapped to a tree on his last trip to mabu.
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duiker. that'll be a nice one of the duiker. daytime. aha! there they are! there they are. now, i've got sound on this as well. chuckles. these are the hunters and they've seen the camera trap. they'll try and open it next. i knew i'd catch the buggers. are there lots of hunters here? not in the middle of this forest, no, it's — they don't need to come so deep because they can get all of the animals they need in the forest edge so this centre area here is not that well hunted. it's rare. why spend the effort in coming deep into the forest when you can get all your food on the edge? though frowned on by some, hunting is clearly still an important source of food for communities that live near the forest.
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we head out in the morning with an expert in setting traps of a rather different sort. this is fresh, right? very fresh. 0h! oh, my... that's good. dr gimo daniel is a dung beetle researcher... you guys, are you sure you don't want to...? ..and to find new species
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of them, you need bait... hold on, hold on — i want to put on my gloves. ..and a stern constitution. first of all, we need to dig a hole, right? so, we can bury a yoghurt container, right? after that, we put soil to soil level. and then, we need to be as neat as possible because dung beetles are full of nonsense — they want a neat pit for the trap! they're fussy? they're very fussy! laughter. after that, we use this plastic cup — we call it a �*magic container�*. and this is a magic spoon that we use the spoon to scoop. so, you have to be careful with me if you come and, "gimo, can i borrow your spoon?" i'm not borrowing your spoon! there's no way i'm borrowing your spoon, gimo! working as a dung beetle researcher, you have to be very productive in terms of dung, so you will be useless in case
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you go to the field, you won't be able to produce your own dung. it's like going to work to your office without your tools for work. so, it's pointless. so, that's why i produce my own dung to do research here. so, yourfaeces are being used to bait the traps? basically, yeah, i'm using my faeces as a bait to attract dung beetles here in the forest. and is it fresh? it's a fresh one, fresh one — yeah, that's correct. all right. today, we're going to be setting up about 25 traps. it's a lot of traps and it needs a lot of dung. well, it's a good job we had curry last night in the camp — you must have a lot! that's correct! they can smell up to 30—50 metres, so they come as fast as they can. 0therwise, if they're late, they won't get the fresh one. and then, there's a lot of competition in forests or nature. so, all over this part of the forest, there are probably dung beetles smelling your poo, thinking... that's correct! .."it�*s lunchtime!" that's correct!
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no, i think this time around, maybe, it's brunch! laughter. as it turns out, gimo's bait is particularly good at attracting beetles. he tells me he's already found 15 new species here and has two more possibles lined up from this trip. mabu forest is quite specialfor dung beetles — and remember, this is my second time to come to mabu, right? and in 2022, i did - i led the first expedition to explore dung beetles in mabu forest. then, i collected ten species. half of them were new to science. wow! yeah, that's fantastic! back in camp, well, there's some friendly rivalry in the quest for new discoveries. he's very good at discovering new species of beetles but to be fair, there are so many beetles to be
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discovered, right, gimo? it doesn't take much to discover a new species. no, not really! not really! later that evening after a night spent out on a high ridge, the bird on a high ridge, the bird experts were back, experts were back, and they brought with them some and they brought with them some good news about the extremely good news about the extremely rare namuli apalis. rare namuli apalis. we literally just drove we literally just drove back two minutes ago, back two minutes ago, found the apalis, we found found the apalis, we found a fantastic new site. a fantastic new site. the territory where the apalis the territory where the apalis is in is a beautiful site — is in is a beautiful site — it's a magnificent hilltop that, like, overlooks, it's a magnificent hilltop that, like, overlooks, like, half of central like, half of central mozambique. mozambique. so, it must be a real relief so, it must be a real relief to know the bird is still here? would remain this way. to know the bird is still here? it is, hugely — hugely. it is, hugely — hugely. so, we managed to get a sound so, we managed to get a sound recording of it as well, recording of it as well, but we never but we never managed to get a photo, managed to get a photo, but got the sounds. but got the sounds. that's good enough — that's good enough — you know that it's still here? you know that it's still here? good enough, so it's confirmed. good enough, so it's confirmed. 0k. it's exciting. 0k. it's exciting. we wish we'd found more, actually. we wish we'd found more, actually. it's a little bit it's a little bit concerning, to be honest. concerning, to be honest. so we're going to have to look so we're going to have to look towards other conservation towards other conservation areas as well areas as well to protect this bird. to protect this bird. but, yeah, it's great to know it's still here. with the trip nearing its end, thoughts began turning to how
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long mabu forest
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of this forest. it's very difficult to find - a balance where we protect the forests for the long—term good of humanity but also . to ensure that in the short - term, communities don't suffer from the resources being taken away from them. l to come to mabu is not an easy process. so access to mabu is very difficult but hopefully, if this forest is protected and it turns into a community park or reserve, hopefully there's a lot of tourism and with tourism, we can improve our roads and eventually, we'll have a lot of scientists coming here and explore more about mabu forest.
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the mozambique authorities confirmed to the bbc that formal proposals to protect mabu and have the local community manage it are now, thanks to the scientists, about to be introduced. this is a rare good news story for conservation. this is a conservation success story, yes. it's nice to have one? yes, it is. all right? yeah. success! we did it! we made it to the other side. exactly! laughter
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hello. if you have travel plans this weekend, it's probably worth keeping an eye on the weather forecast because wintry weather could cause some quite significant disruption. met office amber warnings have been issued for snow and ice during the weekend, particularly covering parts of wales, the midlands and up into northern england as we head through saturday night and on into sunday. so, what's going on? well, cold air has set in across the uk, this cold arctic air sitting in place. and then, from the south—west, some milder air tries to make a move and along the boundary between the two, we have this weather front. as this weather front moves into the cold air, well, it is that that will generate some significant snow for some of us, but also some rain down towards the south as things turn milder. saturday morning, though, starting with some fog, especially down towards the south — freezing fog after a cold night. and after that foggy start with cloud rolling in from the south, i think across some southern parts,
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it will be quite a grey day. more sunshine for northern england, northern ireland and scotland, although there will be some wintry showers. in fact, some more widespread wet and wintry weather moving across the northern isles. temperatures really struggling. in aberdeen, it may not get above freezing through the afternoon. even further south, highs of three, four, five degrees. but as we head through saturday evening, that wet weather moves into the southwest of england, maybe some snow over higher ground but that snow developing more widely as our weather system moves into wales, the midlands. 0ver some of the highest ground here, we could see 30cm of snow, maybe up to 40cm eventually across the high ground of the pennines, that snowfall moving its way into northern england. but notice what happens down to the south by the end of the night. 12 degrees there in plymouth for sunday morning, some much milder air to the south and so, some of what falls from the sky will be turning back to rain across parts of wales, the midlands — that could give ice for a time. further snow, particularly across higher ground in northern england but maybe to low levels for a time. some snow into southern and eastern scotland,
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perhaps just clipping into the southeast of northern ireland. some big temperature contrasts on sunday afternoon — cold in the north, much milder further south, but that mild air in the south is not going to last. as we head into the new week, it is going to turn cold again. we should see a fair bit of sunshine but we do continue to have the chance for some wintry showers. bye for now.
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live from washington, this is bbc news. the british government has confirmed one of its citizens was killed in the attack in new orleans on new year's day. a judge says he'll sentence donald trump before the inauguration — but signals he won't send him to prison. applause trump's pick for house speaker, mikejohnson, narrowly holds on to the position.
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hello. i'm helena humphrey. good to have you with us. the uk government has confirmed that a british citizen is among those killed in the attack in new orleans on new year's day. he's been named as 31—year—old edward pettifer from chelsea in london. the coroner said he died of injuries caused by blunt force. his family issued a statement, saying they were: an american college football player, an aspiring nurse, and a mother of a four—year old are among the other people who were killed when a car mowed down party—goers in the city's french quarter. 1a people died and dozens were injured. authorities say the man behind the attack — shamsud—dinjabbar — placed explosive devices near the area before driving a truck into the crowd. the fbi says the army veteran acted alone and had declared his support for the group calling itself islamic state.

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