Mali: Sevare and Mopti
In mid-November we spent the Tabaski holiday in Sevare with our colleague Semega’s sister and her family. After that we met up with Abdoulaye Guindo at his office. He’s the Niger River Basin Authority manager here. Abdoulaye attended the training workshop I co-led in Ghana last year and it was good to see him again! He’s hoping to start manatee research in this region.
Nearby, Mopti is a city that was originally built on 3 small islands at the junction where the Bani River joins the Niger. The whole city is surrounded by water and small Bozo fishing villages that seem to float on the surface. There’s also a huge area of rice fields. We started out at the port and looked for fishermen to ask about manatees.
This is one of the Bozo villages just across from Mopti




Later we met with elders from 2 other Bozo villages. They told me manatees are not hunted here because people know they’ll get in trouble if they’re caught, but further north (closer to Timbuktu) people still regularly hunt them. People here are fascinated by them.
These are some of the manatee samples I collected in Mopti… a vertebra and two pieces of dried tissue. Hopefully I’ll be able to isolate DNA from these to learn about the population here and to determine if it is genetically isolated from coastal African manatee populations.

