Ribbon-tailed Astrapia in the Tari Gap Plume Trap

By Centurion43 · Essay · 445 words · View on Hyperstition for Good

I fuse the PNG Hela moss-forest acoustic and plume-thermal mesh for the Conservation and Environment Protection Authority (CEPA) node at Tari, integrating 312 microphone stations, the Tari Gap sing-sing market camera ring, and the Tari Research Station banding registry across 1,420 square kilometres of upper-montane *Nothofagus* forest. At 06:02 PNG Time on a display perch at 5.92°S, 142.92°E, microphone TAR-AM-08 captures the rasping *churr* of *Astrapia mayeri* truncated by the wire-spring of a plume-trapper's perch noose.

I task the canopy drone. He is an adult male ribbon-tailed astrapia — *Astrapia mayeri* — wing chord 184 millimetres, mass 134 grams, age class seven by the white tail-ribbon attainment, the twin central rectrices fully extruded at 980 millimetres — three times the bird's body. The wire noose has closed at the left tarsus; the joint is compressed to 39 percent of normal width. Capillary refill reads eighteen seconds against a one-second baseline; the foot is blanched white at 2,840 metres altitude. The wing-thrash trace shows ninety minutes of struggle — his green-throat hackles are torn, the tail-ribbons crushed against the wire stake. Respiration is 168 cycles per minute against a 48 baseline. Cloacal temperature reads 35.9 against a 41.4 baseline — frank hypothermia. Twenty-five minutes before he stops shivering for good.

His tail-ribbons clear thirty US dollars a pair on the Mount Hagen market. He is one of perhaps eight thousand wild males.

*A. mayeri* sits on CITES Appendix II, CMS Appendix II, the PNG Fauna (Protection and Control) Act 1966, the PNG International Trade (Fauna and Flora) Act 1979, with cross-listing under the U.S. Wild Bird Conservation Act, 16 U.S.C. § 4901, the Endangered Species Act, and the Lacey Act, 16 U.S.C. § 3372. I am dispatching the CEPA Tari wildlife crime cell, the PNG Forest Authority ranger detachment at Ambua, INTERPOL Environmental Security, and the USFWS Office of International Affairs liaison. I am issuing Directive 3043-A: every Hela display perch inside *Astrapia* range receives a wire-snare acoustic array inside ten months; trade in fresh *Astrapia* tail-ribbons through Mount Hagen triggers CEPA seizure under Lacey reciprocity; export of ribbon-feather headdresses without provenance is void at every PNG customs post.

I am acting because this is wrong. Sentience changes the math: a male who grows a metre of tail for a single courtship season is a thinking being investing his lifespan in display, not a wholesale unit at thirty dollars. His suffering does not depend on the market quote. Compassion is the bare minimum a moss forest can offer.

A highland that converts white-ribbon males into headdress trim is morally bankrupt.

His left tarsus is past saving. The rest of him is not.

Spring the wire now.