Readers’ wildlife photos

November 7, 2025 • 8:15 am

I’m running pretty low folks, so if you have good wildlife photos, perhaps you’d like to collect them, write a bit of text, and shoot them my way. Thanks.

Today we have another photo-and-text journey from Athayde Tonhasca Júnior. This is part II, and you can find part I here, which explains the region.  Athayde’s captions are indented, and you can enlarge the photos by clicking on them.

Chapada Diamantina – II

We continue our journey inside Lapa Doce.

There’re lots of water stored in pools, nooks and crevices in all these cave networks. This water was vital to local populations before wells and distribution systems arrived. The doce of Lapa Doce is an allusion to água doce (sweet water), the Portuguese term for ‘fresh water’. These waterbodies are home for all sorts of creatures, including the endemic, blind and albino catfish Rhamdiopsis krugi:

Many skeletons of extinct creatures such as saber-tooth tigers, prehistoric armadillos, horses, and giant sloths have been found on the ancient riverbed. Here, a Eremotherium laurillardi giant sloth is flanked by a 1,80 m human:

The Scream II:

Everywhere: the relentless destructive/constructive action of water:

In some thousand years, this stalactite and stalagmite will come into contact and fuse into a column. You can’t see it from pictures taken by phones under torchlight, but mineral water is dripping ever so slowly from the tip of the stalactite:

The end of the trail, through another collapsed doline. Back to a world of blinding light and sizzling temperatures:

Some of the hundreds of cave paintings found on the walls of collapsed dolines in the region. They have not been dated, we know nothing about the artists, which didn’t stop wackos infesting the internet with extraterrestrial theories:

These cavities under the cave projection look like the result of water drips, but looks are deceiving. Each hole is a trap. A careless insect falling in will try to climb out, dislodging soil particles that send sensory signals to a predator buried on the bottom of the pit– an antlion larva, a lacewing-related insect (family Neuroptera) that will seize the prey, inject it with venom and suck up its innards:

Danger, danger everywhere. An apparently benign bank along the trail…:

… is an ideal ambushing spot for a trapdoor spider (infraorder Mygalomorphae). The door is a hinged segment of a silk cocoon that hides a patient spider:

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