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Ants and Flies On the 22cd of July the schooner Hester Helena
arrived, and five days afterwards we bade adieu to Dorey, without much
regret, for in no place which I have visited have I encountered more
privations and annoyances. Continual rain, continual sickness, little
wholesome food, with a plague of ants and files, surpassing anything I
had before met with, required all a naturalist's ardour to encounter;
and when they were uncompensated by great success in collecting, became
all the more insupportable. This long thought-of and much-desired voyage
to New Guinea had realized none of my expectations. Instead of being far
better than the Aru Islands, it was in almost everything much worse.
Instead of producing several of the rarer Paradise birds, I had not even
seen one of them, and had not obtained any one superlatively fine bird
or insect. I cannot deny, however, that Dorey was very rich in ants. One
small black kind was excessively abundant. Almost every shrub and tree
was more or less infested with it, and its large papery nests were
everywhere to be seen. They immediately took possession of my house,
building a large nest in the roof, and forming papery tunnels down
almost every post. They swarmed on my table as I was at work setting out
my insects, carrying them off from under my very nose, and even tearing
them from the cards on which they were gummed if I left them for an
instant. They crawled continually over my hands and face, got into my
hair, and roamed at will over my whole body, not producing much
inconvenience till they began to bite, which they would do on meeting
with any obstruction to their passage, and with a sharpness which made
me jump again and rush to undress and turn out the offender. They
visited my bed also, so that night brought no relief from their
persecutions; and I verily believe that during my three and a half
months' residence at Dorey I was never for a single hour entirely free
from them. They were not nearly so voracious as many other kinds, but
their numbers and ubiquity rendered it necessary to be constantly on
guard against them. |
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Expedition in New Guinea
In 1858 a great British naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace conducted an expedition to Dorey bay (now Manokwari town of West Papua) in New Guinea in search of paradise birds. The following stories were translated into Bahasa Indonesia from Chapter XXXIV of his book entitled The Malay Archipelago
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