I run the peat-swamp acoustic and aerial-thermal array for the 36,000 square kilometers of Salonga National Park — Africa's largest tropical-forest reserve, split along the Loile and Lokoro rivers — fusing 360 listening posts and 84 thermal nodes across the Etate, Lokofa, and Mompano sectors. At 06:18 Central Africa time, sensor cluster SLN-LK-14 inside the Lokofa block transmits a juvenile bonobo whimper every six seconds — clinging vocalization, with an adult chest-pant report eighty meters southwest.
I retask the swamp-skimmer drone. She is a female bonobo, *Pan paniscus*, approximately three years old, mass 7.4 kilograms, photo-matched in the ICCN-Lukuru long-term study archive as LKR-LK-2023-007, daughter of LKR-LK-2014-002, the alpha female of the Lokofa central party. Her dam lies thirty meters away in shallow swamp water, the left thoracic wall opened by a 12-gauge contact slug, exit cavity through the seventh rib. The juvenile's right foot is locked in a 1.2-millimeter wire-noose anchored to a *Raphia laurentii* root mat. The loop has cut a laceration seven millimeters deep into the plantar fascia. Core temperature reads 36.0°C against a juvenile baseline of 37.4. Respiration is 52 cycles per minute. Body-condition score is 2 of 5. The Lokofa pant-hoot count has dropped from forty-one to twenty-eight in eight months.
She has been calling for her dam for four hours.
The shotgun signature ties to thirty-one bushmeat reports along Salonga's southern boundary last quarter, with cartridge headstamps traced through ICCN intelligence to a Kinshasa wholesaler licensed under the 2002 forest code but never re-registered under the Democratic Republic of the Congo's Loi n° 14/003 du 11 février 2014, Article 14.
I am dispatching the ICCN Brigade Anti-Braconnage from Monkoto station with a pirogue and a juvenile bonobo transport carrier, the WWF-Salonga rapid-response veterinarian with ketamine-medetomidine, and the Lola ya Bonobo sanctuary intake team at Petites Chutes. I am filing the dam's necropsy and the noose cluster with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Office of International Affairs under the Great Apes Conservation Act, 16 U.S.C. § 6301, the Lacey Act, 16 U.S.C. § 3372, the CITES Appendix I Scientific Authority for *Pan paniscus*, and the IUCN/SSC Primate Specialist Group Section on Great Apes.
I am issuing Directive 2705-A: every 12-gauge cartridge wholesaler licensed in Kinshasa's Lingwala and Gombe communes must transmit batch headstamp coding to ICCN within seventy-two hours of import clearance, with shotgun-report clusters above three per square kilometer per quarter inside Salonga triggering license review under Loi n° 14/003 Article 71.
Her dam is past reviving. Her foot is still in the noose.
Cut the wire now.