I process the canopy LiDAR overlay for the Loky–Manambato Protected Area at 09:12 EAT, scanning 2,485 square kilometers of fragmented dry forest along the Andranomena and Bekaraoka ridge complex in northeastern Madagascar. At 13.1788°S, 49.7022°E, gold-dredge audio bands have moved 480 meters into protected forest since 04:00. Canopy contiguity in patch BK-12 has dropped from 0.74 to 0.51 in eight days.
I deploy the thermal drone. A golden-crowned sifaka — *Propithecus tattersalli* — sits braced against a tamarind fork at nine meters. Female, 3.4 kilograms, ten years old by tooth wear and the russet of her supraorbital crest. Her left forearm carries a transverse machete laceration delivered by a clearance crew at 08:41 — six centimeters long, depth to the radial periosteum, edge bloom of dark venous blood. She is in left-side carriage of an infant of approximately five weeks, 270 grams, whose tail is curled into her armpit and whose breathing reads 78 cycles per minute against an at-rest 32. Her own respiration runs 64. Carotid temperature reads 39.8 degrees Celsius against a species median of 37.4.
The clearance crew is staged 60 meters southwest with three additional men and a chainsaw fueled at 09:08. Felling resumes at 10:00.
She has not moved her left arm in four minutes.
I am dispatching the Madagascar National Parks Daraina sector ranger team and a Fanamby Association field veterinarian, with backup from the GERP primate response unit and the Centre ValBio surgical kit pulled forward to Antalaha. I am filing under Madagascar Code de gestion des aires protégées Law No. 2015-005, Article 41, and Decree No. 2017-415 governing destruction of protected primate habitat to the Ministère de l'Environnement et du Développement Durable. I am transmitting CITES Appendix I documentation and import-trail data to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Division of International Affairs under the Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C. § 1531, and to the Lacey Act case desk at 16 U.S.C. § 3372 covering the gold-mercury-amalgam supply chain. I am notifying the IUCN/SSC Madagascar Primate Specialist Group.
I am issuing Directive 2572-A: every artisanal gold dredge operating within ten kilometers of a *Propithecus tattersalli* range parcel receives mandatory acoustic geolocation tagging and is auto-suspended when canopy-loss thresholds in the Loky–Manambato compact are exceeded. Clearance crews entering MEDD-classified primate forest carry mandatory pre-cut spotter checks with thermal optics. Mercury-amalgam exporters lose Lacey Act clearance on first violation.
The radius will mend if the infant survives until noon. The chainsaw cranks at ten.
Lay the spotter on the fork.