Oman Daily Observer

Lensman captures human face of endangered species

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WASHINGTON: animal to death?

A new book by British photograph­er Tim Flach documents some of Earth’s most treasured species pushed to the brink of extinction by man-made crises, from pangolins hunted for their scales to Brazil’s pied tamarin threatened by urbanisati­on.

“Most of the changes in the past have been driven by natural forces, but on this occasion, it seems to be driven by us,” Flach said.

“My real question is: ‘ Why am I here doing it? Why am I here taking a picture of the last male white rhino?’ It’s the question of how we got to that point, rather than simply one of wonderment.”

Coral, insects and even some ecosystems are included alongside some of the most recognisab­le threatened mammals such as polar bears and lesser-known creatures like Can you love an harlequin toads.

The panda is one of the least vulnerable species found in the more than 150 images of Endangered, whose release coincides with a new exhibition of Flach’s photos in London’s Osborne Samuel Gallery.

Flach, known for his highly stylised photograph­s of dogs and horses, captures the animals’ almost human expression­s.

On the book’s cover, a crowned sifaka lemur hugs his knees towards his chest, his bright yellow eyes betraying a worried yet inquisitiv­e look, like a reprimande­d schoolboy.

Flach, 59, often uses a black velvet backdrop and his lighting captures colours in such detail that one can almost feel the softness of the lemur’s black, orange and white fur.

In the summer, Flach trekked to Russia’s Caspian Sea, hiding in a “fly-infested hole” in search of the saiga antelope, an Ice Age survivor that once roamed alongside woolly mammoths but could soon be wiped out by poachers preying on its twisted horns.

Flach could only get a good sighting of the females, so he returned in the dead of winter with the longest lens he could borrow from Canon and got just one shot.

Other encounters during a twoyear odyssey included staring the last male white rhinoceros in the eye and swimming with great white sharks off the Galapagos Islands.

He hopes that others passion for wildlife.

“If we care about something, we are more likely to take action,” said Flach. share his

 ?? PREACHING NON-VIOLENCE: — Reuters ?? An activist holds purple balloons at El Navajo creek, where the bodies of several women were found, during a ceremony to mark the Internatio­nal Day for the Eliminatio­n of Violence Against Women in Praxedis G. Guerrero, on the outskirts of Ciudad...
PREACHING NON-VIOLENCE: — Reuters An activist holds purple balloons at El Navajo creek, where the bodies of several women were found, during a ceremony to mark the Internatio­nal Day for the Eliminatio­n of Violence Against Women in Praxedis G. Guerrero, on the outskirts of Ciudad...
 ?? — AFP ?? London-based photograph­er Tim Flach poses with his book ‘Endangered’ in Washington, DC.
— AFP London-based photograph­er Tim Flach poses with his book ‘Endangered’ in Washington, DC.

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