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 Mark Brazil

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Mark Brazil
Mark Brazil, a Briton based in Hokkaido, has written about the natural history of Japan in his Wild Watch column for over 30 years. After careers in conservation and natural history television, Mark taught for nine years at a university in Hokkaido before going freelance. He now travels the world as a lecturer and leader on wildlife-focused expeditions.
For Mark Brazil's latest contributions to The Japan Times, see below:
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Apr 19, 2009
A rip and a burp and the land is ours
It's that time of year when Japan's media are meticulously monitoring the iconic cherry-blossom front as it passes up through the archipelago in a wave of warming temperatures and bursting buds.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Mar 15, 2009
Icy white 'blossoms' and a flourish of deep pink
Each day last week I strapped on cross-country skis to patrol some trails quartering the primeval, 2,050-hectare Nopporo Forest adjoining Sapporo.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Feb 15, 2009
Celebrating a life with cranes
In the dim gray light just before a winter's dawn, a wash of sound emanates from some 12,000 tall, long-necked and long-legged birds as they awake in the fields of rural Kyushu.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Jan 18, 2009
Karori: A wildlife sanctuary for our times
A new year has begun, signs of change abound, and this column has migrated to a new page. The economic crises of 2008 are still with us and the nightmare of global climate shock is not one that we can awaken from. But among all this there are signs of hope.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Dec 17, 2008
In praise of 'Ice Birds'
The rush, chatter and babble of a stream on a summer's day is a great delight; the constantly shifting sounds make entrancing music and provide a wonderful source of entertainment for the wait-and-see naturalist.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Nov 19, 2008
Sweet dreams in the forest
A gray wall of cloud is sweeping away my view, and the color is being leached from the mountains beyond Sapporo as the drabness of an early winter evening descends. A week of falling mercury, winds from the north and rainfall have whisked away most of this autumn's browning leaves. We seem to have been short-changed this year and the palette of autumnal colors, usually so vibrant, has been as lackluster as the economy. There is hardship ahead, and in more ways than one.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Oct 15, 2008
Let them eat whales!
Whales once fueled the industrialized world. First there was wood, then coal fired its steam engines alongside seal oil and whale oil that powered and lit the age of "dark satanic mills."
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Sep 17, 2008
Przewalski's Horses running free in Mongolia
Imagine, if you can, the prehistoric cave-wall images of Lascaux in France springing to life, the animal likenesses breaking free of their multimillennia entrapment in pigment and rock.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Aug 20, 2008
Birds' heaven and hell
It is August already, and it's a matter of life and death for certain seabirds. While southern species will already have run the gauntlet of the gulls, in the north it's happening now.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Jul 16, 2008
Lives and a death
CHUKOTKA, Russia — This month, instead of writing this column as usual at my desk in Hokkaido, I am writing from a desk on board the Clipper Odyssey as we cross the Gulf of Anadyr in Russia's far northeastern Chukotka region. Our voyage began at Otaru, Hokkaido, and we have taken in southern Sakhalin, the Kurile Islands, Kamchatka and the coast of Chukotka on our way to Nome, Alaska.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Jun 18, 2008
Aloft with ospreys, ultimate Fisher Kings
There is a moment of commitment; a glint of scales just beneath the water's surface is perhaps the trigger. As the bright-yellow eyes register the rippled light patterns, the brain is already identifying them as potential food, computing distance, assessing direction, considering depth.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
May 21, 2008
A nature sanctuary for the ages
Regular readers know that my usual sphere is the biosphere and that I typically pursue wildlife in the wilds. Occasionally, though, one should step beyond home turf and try dipping a toe into a new stream of consciousness.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Apr 16, 2008
Omissions and risky commissions
For several years now I have been at work on a new book — to be titled "Field Guide to the Birds of East Asia" — that is due to be published later this year. You may think it would be an easy matter to put together such a tome; after all, ornithologists and birdwatchers have been studying birds for decades, if not centuries.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Mar 19, 2008
Egrets' epitome of elegance
Late afternoon sunlight was slanting low, glinting like liquid gold, reflecting in the narrow strip of water between broad expanses of snow.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Feb 20, 2008
Nature tour turns sour as we see 'endangered' prey killed
A great white mass, a broken blanket of sea ice, was moving south down the Sea of Okhotsk carried on currents and blown by winds from the north. From the flank of Mount Mokoto it appeared like a mirage, a whitened margin to the sea's northern horizon, but from the much closer range of the cliff tops at Cape Notoro, the jagged nature of the floes were discernible through my telescope.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Jan 16, 2008
Snow season's not what it was . . .
"Winter either bites with its teeth or lashes with its tail." (Traditional proverb)
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Dec 19, 2007
There's no time like snow time!
As much as I enjoy the rich biodiversity of the Tropics — as anyone who read my column here last month on the wildlife of Brazil will know — my favorite season is winter.
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Nov 21, 2007
Biodiversity to take your breath away
I promised that I would write more about my recent visit to South America, and as the first snows are now regularly dusting the mountains on view from my window here in Hokkaido — and even coating my balcony — it's hard not to reflect on times spent in warmer climes.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Oct 17, 2007
Individual variations and a sense of identity
I have recently returned to Japan from five astonishing weeks in the neotropics. Exploring and observing the riches of Brazil's Atlantic rain forest and Pantanal (the world's biggest wetland area) has left me overwhelmed by their biodiversity.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / WILD WATCH
Sep 19, 2007
Serendipity twice over
On a calm evening, I looked out from my balcony toward the mountains to the west, beyond Sapporo. Those distant peaks stretched in an apparently unbroken chain, from the gently sloping flanks of volcanic Mount Tarumae at the southernmost end, rising and falling northward in a bold, time-weathered horizon through Mount Soranuma, Mount Sapporo, Mount Teine and, on this stunningly clear evening, even as far as Mount Akaiwa beyond Otaru.

Longform

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