NONFICTION

For the birds: One woman's courageous stand

The account of the fight to stop the Chalillo Dam proves that one person can make a difference.

THE LAST FLIGHT OF THE SCARLET MACAW: One Woman's Fight to Save the World's Most Beautiful Bird. Bruce Barcott. Random. 315 pages. $25.95.

As the reality of waning resources and climate change sets in, many people must echo Outside magazine contributing editor Bruce Barcott's admission that ''[a]t times the earth's fate seems so dire and inexorable that I'm tempted to throw up my hands and say to hell with it.'' In his new book, he reminds us that there are still too few of us with the courage of Sharon Matola, an American expatriate who risked her livelihood to the save Belize's vanishing population of scarlet macaws.

The eccentric, often divisive director of the Belize Zoo, Matola spent six years attempting to stop the Belize government from building the Chalillo Dam and flooding the Macal Valley, a scarlet macaw nesting place that Matola dubs ''a Noah's ark for all the endangered species driven out of the rest of Central America.'' Her fight began with a simple letter of protest; led to the government labeling her an enemy of the people and the involvement of the Natural Resource Defense Council; and ended with a rare appeal to the London Privy Council (Belize's head of state is still Queen Elizabeth II).

A dynamic cast of characters buoys the story, from Matola, whose quirks (like sharing her office with a three-legged jaguar) outdid Belize's already ''colorful human menagerie'' to Belizean finance minister Ralph Fonseca, whom Barcott vibrantly describes as possessing ''the cunning of Iago and the silhouette of Alfred Hitchcock.'' With a plot so multilayered and dramatic that readers will need to remind themselves it's a true account, the narrative achieves the depth of a case study and the accessible intimacy of a short feature. Throughout, Barcott's relaxed, lucid writing and inventive descriptions -- such as rendering the macaw as a colorful chicken that ''sounds like one of nature's chain-smokers, their cry a throaty, blaring rrra'' -- place readers firmly on the side of Matola and the birds.

Barcott weaves facilely between the chronology of Matola's story and uncovering the intricate plait of issues surrounding it, including Belize's increasing electricity needs, extinction, the history of dams, environmental impact statements and utility privatization (Belize sold theirs after taking out an ad in The Economist), while deftly integrating implications of the political history between Belize, England and Guatemala, current corruption, colonial grudges and citizen apathy. Though some sections suffer from repetition, Barcott's reminders are helpful in navigating the web of this protracted battle, which he explicitly supports throughout his first-person account.

The fight to stop the Chalillo Dam is just one of the increasingly difficult choices we face in preserving the environment for other species, and it may actually be a tactical choice for sustaining human life as well. And though in the end the Belize government was allowed to act on its own, and the dam was completed in 2005, Matola's story is powerful proof that individuals -- even by writing just one letter -- can make a difference.

Christine Thomas is a writer in Hawaii.

 

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