Through a chronicler's lens
Interview with Percy Fernandez, wildlife photographer who is Professor and Chairperson for the School of Media and Communication, Manipal Academy of Higher Education, Dubai, UAE.
Published :
Dec 07, 2021 21:32
IST
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Tim at the Amboseli National Park in Kenya. He was 50 when he died in 2020. He was considered to be Africa’s largest elephant with arguably the longest tusks.
Photo: PERCY
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A cheetha named Imani and her cubs in the Masai Mara National Reserve, Kenya.
Photo: PERCY FERNANDEZ
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A herd of impalas in Masai Mara. ▲
Two male lions in Masai Mara. Percy Fernandez: “You have to have ... infinite patience to get a photograph capturing the moods of wild animals.” ▲
In Masai Mara, zebras drinking water.
Photo: PERCY
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In Masai Mara, grey crowned cranes. Fernandez: “By shooting over a period of time, serious photographers can chronicle natural history and the relationship between man, nature and the wilderness.” ▲
The leopard Luluka and her cub in Masai Mara. ▲
Giraffes against the morning light in Masai Mara. ▲
A black rhino flanked by a topi and a gazelle. ▲
The famous cheetahs of Masai Mara. Fernandez: “This group was the largest coalition ever to be observed in the wild hunting together. In 2017, they were five of them, called Tano Bora [which] in Masai means the Fast Five.”
Photo: PERCY FERNANDEZ
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Kurile Lake with the Ilyinsky volcano in the background in Kamchatka, which is in Russia’s Far East. ▲
Mutnovsky is an active volcano in Kamchatka. ▲
A bear with her cubs in Kamchatka. ▲
Fernandez: “... overfishing for salmon, a human-induced disturbance of the food chain and the ecosystem, has had a telling effect on the bear population.” ▲
The Vilyuchinsky volcano in Kamchatka. ▲
Siesta time for a mother and her cubs. Fernandez: “... photographers should take care not to disturb animals during shoots.” ▲
A jaguars walking along the side of a river looking for caimans, in Pantanal, the world’s largest wetland ecosystem, in the Brazilian Amazon. ▲
A giant otter with a fish in Pantanal. ▲
A hyacinth macaw in Pantanal. The region suffered massive wildfires in 2020.
Photo: CREDIT
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A view of the Pumori peak, from Gorakshep, en route to Everest Base Camp, Nepal.
Photo: CERDIT
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Wild dogs at the Nagarhole National Park in Karnataka. Fernandez: “It is an indescribable feeling when I am in the mountains or in the forests [or in some other landscape], whether it is the forests of Nagarhole in Karnataka or the desert in the UAE or, for that matter, the grasslands of the Mara.”
Photo: PERCY
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A gaur at the Nagarhole National Park.
Photo: CERDIT
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A Malabar giant squirrel at Nagarhole.
Photo: PERCY
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A langur at the Bandhavgarh National Park in Madhya Pradesh.
Photo: CERDIT
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Percy Fernandez.
Photo: credit
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