Thursday, October 8, 2020

Dr. T S U de Zylva - Ornithologist, Conservationist and Bird Photographer par Excellence.


Dr. T S U de Zylva…passed away at the ripe old age of 94 years, on 13th September 2020.  He was ‘Upen’ to his dear companions and Dr. Upendra to his clientele of Kurunegala who looked to him for their ailments.  

He was a well-known medical practitioner in Kurunegala with a long-established history, running his own private practice after a brief stint in the Government Health Service. However he was more renowned and celebrated as the first-ever wildlife photographer specializing in bird photography who introduced our birdlife to the world in the mid-19th century through his numerous pictorial publications.   

Dr. Thosatiratne Sri Upendra de Zylva (TSU) was born in 1927. He had his early education at Maliyadeva College Kurunegala, and moved to Royal College, Colombo for his high school education. When WW II broke out the Royal College premises was taken over by the RAF and young TSU had to move into Kandy with his parents and was enrolled at the Dharmaraja College. With the war ending, he was back in Colombo but this time not in Royal College but as a student of Ananda College from where he passed his Matriculation Examination followed by the University Entrance Examination facilitating his entry to the Medical Faculty.

He had a passion for photography and biology but there were times when photography did override the other. Young TSU when in the Medical College did take a photo of an operation being performed by legendary Surgeon Dr. P R Anthonis then as a demonstration to the medicos. Fearful of the incident the young medico handed the photograph to Dr. Anthonis; to his astonishment, he was commended and gifted Rs 300/= for the print. That was a fortune worth 100 film rolls for him then.

It was his mother who bought him his first camera a Zeiss Contax when on a holiday in India and his father also a practicing doctor in Kurunegala, gifted him a 16mm Bolex Cine camera the day he passed out as a qualified doctor.

His first appointment was to the Chilaw hospital as the first House Officer. This was a time when there was only a District Medical Officer and a District Medical Assistant before him. It was while in Chilaw that he befriends Herschel Pandithasekera, a well-known personality in the bird circles who had a passion for Snipe shooting. It was he who encouraged him into birdwatching and bird photography.

After a brief stint in the Health Services, his father calls him to join the family practice assisted by his brother-in-law, Dr. Ananda de Silva. This brings him back to Kurunegala and life got into a routine and his brother-in-law gave him the liberty of taking every other weekend off for his photography and he would coverup for him,

Picture courtesy - M.A. Pushpa Kumara Sunday Times

Known as the “ge aran ena mahaththaya” meaning the gentleman who comes with the house for he carried his bird hides done of canvas and jute and ventured into the remotest countryside to photo record nesting behavior of rare birds. It would take hours for him to install the hides elevating him to be in line with the bird and would sit for days inside them to get his prize photo. The only record of the very rare Broad-billed Roller [Dollar Bird] nesting has still not been recorded since his record 40 years ago. It was not the digital era then and color film processing was not heard of in the country. All his exposures were on positive color slides that were very costly and were processed outside the country.

Dr. T S U de Zylva ventured to his task of bird photography with limited resources and equipment depended on his Hasselblad camera. He had done much photo recording of bird behavior then when compared to what is taking place now in the most viral way. However, it must be noted that he discontinued his habit of photographing the nesting behavior of birds when it was to be reprehended in line with the general practice of ethical birdwatching that was to be introduced later. This being for restriction of man’s intervention with breeding birds and of divulging the habitats of critically endangered and rare birds.

His love for the Hasselblad camera and the versatility of its usage in the field of bird photography brings him closer to Dr. Victor Hasselblad himself [inventor of the Hasselblad camera] and together they venture into wildlife conservation and numerous other publications. As a gesture to his commitment, TSU receives a grant worth US$ 30,000 from Dr. Victor Hasselblad to be used on any worthy wildlife undertaking.


He is credited with the earliest publication of the photographic guide to the BIRDS OF SRI LANKA which displays much of his own photographs. This followed with a wonderful collection of coffee table publications……   Wings in the Wetlands: A Photographic Portfolio,... Sri Lanka Jungle Profiles (Animals of the SAARC Region),... Sinharaja: Portrait of a Rainforest,... Sri Lanka Nature Pictorial,... Cradles on the Sand: In a Bygone Era,... Images of Birds: A Random Selection of the Birds of Sri Lanka.

He was an active member of the two prominent bird and wildlife organizations in the 50- 60 era the Ceylon Bird Club (CBC) and the Wildlife & Nature Protection Society (WNPS).  He represented many committees in the WNPS and was elected its President in the years 1982-1983.



Apart from his contribution to birds and photography, his greatest gift to wildlife was in the conservation of sea turtles. He is the pioneer in this venture. He with the late Dr. Siri Wickremesinghe, a close friend with similar interests in wildlife and nature decided on utilizing some monies from the Hasselblad grant for the conservation of sea turtles. They had learned of Similius Abrew of Kosgoda who had a love for turtles and was in the habit of setting them free off ghost nets drifting in the sea.

They meet Similius and discuss their plan to grant a sum of money to build a hatchery and then pay poachers and fishermen more for their eggs than they would be getting selling them to eateries and markets. This was way back in 1978 when all the seven species of sea turtles were on the endangered list and five of them were frequenting the Kosgoda beach to lay their eggs. Similius was not that confident of the venture at the beginning but offered his beachfront property in Nape, Kosgoda to layout the hatchery that was to be financed by TSU.  



Thus started the 1st ever sea turtle conservation project in this country. Initially, it was the school children that came over to Nape to study these turtles and Similius started to collect a small gate fee for maintenance expenses until tourism caught up where he could relieve TSU from the burden of funding the hatchery to meet its overheads.

Today none of them are living but the Kosgoda Sea Turtle Hatchery runs generating its revenue to run on its own managed by Similius’ son Chandrasiri Abrew and grandson.


This is the life story of a gentleman who loved this country, its weather the fauna, and the flora but went very much unheard in the recent past. He took time off from everything just to be part of the forest and nature whenever time permitted. All this happen at a time when photography was not an affordable hobby and one had to wait for weeks to know if your picture was a success or not unlike today’s digitized photography. TSU was a sought after name when it came to the yearend greeting cards then in the ’60s. The WNPS greeting cards were a must and most often they were from prints of TSU’s birds and other wildlife. We schoolboys then were in the habit of collecting these cards. To me, it was him that instigated the love for birds and nature apart from the teachers at school, S Thomas’ College Gurutalawa where birdwatching was practiced as an extracurricular activity. 


I have only met him in person just once when he was entrusted with the task of selecting the three best photographs at the very first bird photography contest conducted by FOGSL. He was generous enough to provide a color slide of a Blue Magpie in Sinharaja for the Blue Magpie Conservation poster for FOGSL. 

udithawijesena@gmail.com

14 comments:

  1. Great article about a great man.
    I understand that he drove a tiny Citroen 2CV which by virtue of its short wheelbase was able to go into difficult terrain at a time when 4wd vehicles were scarce

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    1. May be.... but later it was a Morris Oxford which was his mode of conveyance that could be hitched with a trailer full of his camping gear and the bird hides

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  2. What a great man TSU was, his love of the wilderness and contribution to conservation, an awareness and a love of birds and nature amongst Sri Lankans is second to none. His legacy and high ethics will positively influence many generations come.

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  3. A dedicated conservationist and excellent photographer. The evocative text in his books is unparalleled. He will be truly missed.

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  4. Ornithologist and conservationist par excellence.... not only in bird photography but also in conservation of sea turtles

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  5. Interesting article. Love the Kosgoda sea turtle hatchery and the work they do on conservation of sea turtles. Well done and keep up the good work.

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  6. I have known Upen since my youth when he honed his skills in bird photography at Wehera Estate, Kurunegala owned by the Daniels family.   Indeed his 1st historic book, BIRDS OF SRI LANKA lodged in the British Library, was dedicated to Noel and Maisie Daniels. 
    Although he rightly adhered to later protocols forbidding human intervention with breeding birds, no one could have been more meticulous about preserving and protecting a nesting pair's sense of security than Upen even in those early days when he was photo recording them, as I was witness to in the garden of Ern and Doreen Daniels in Wehera. I have his signed photo of the (Black Headed) Oriole taken in their garden, from which the 1964 Ceylon stamp was printed, and another, also signed by him, of the Paradise Flycatcher (T.p. Ceylonensis) feeding its chicks in that garden.  Another pair taken, in that garden, is in Birds of Sri Lanka. The fact that they bred successfully  without fear or hindrance is evident in these photos.
    Many years later he presented me with his (pre ethical bird watching) photo of the Three-toed Kingfisher, flying to its nest in a gem pit, as he knew I regarded this bird as the jewel in the crown of Sri Lanka's avifauna.  In his poem The Kingfisher W. H. Davies wrote It was the rainbow gave thee birth.  Indeed this species has all the colours of the rainbow, except green, which I found by comparing it with reflected light from a Swarovski crystal.  That this small creature whose jewel-like plumage echoes the gemstones of Sri Lanka, should nest in the very earth which produces them, was a matter of wonder and delight to us both.

    In appreciation for being my role model in valuing the natural world, and rainforests in particular, I sent his book Sinharaja to Prince Charles in 2011 and was delighted to inform him of the enthusiastic letter I received in acknowledgement.  
    There is much that can be written about TSU de Zylva but perhaps above all he should be regarded as a great patriot who celebrated his country by focusing on its varied and endemic birdlife and later, on other aspects of its rich biodiversity.  In my view the country's thriving tourist industry owes much to him as he was instrumental in putting Sri Lanka on the tourist map, having engaged the interest of notable international Conservationists and inspired younger generations of Sri Lankan photographers and authors whose work has helped publicise the bounty and beauty of it's natural world.
    He will live on in the legacy he has left us - an immense and lasting contribution to the preservation of our unique terrestrial and marine biodiversity.
    Dianne Lockhart

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    1. Thanks Dianne... your comment sure does surpass my memoir on TSU. I have not had such intimate contact as you do with him. But yes as you very correctly say ... it was he who put Sri Lanka on the Birding Tourism map before anyone else. Thank You so much.

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  7. He was our family doctor and he filmed a nesting dove from our bedroom window. A great man

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  8. Thank you all for this Memoir. May his Soul Rest In Peace. The good he has done will live on.

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  9. As a former president of WNPS I associaeted with him for a long time and he helped us in our Student Nature Club Programme in Schools and joined us in its activities in schools He togethernwith me managed to give Sinhala names to 242 bird species which had no sinhala names.These names were published in the !978 Revised Edition of ` Annotated Checklist of THE Birds of Ceylon (Sri Lanka) 1978` by Major w.w.A Phillips and booklet titled Srilanka Avifaunal list (Sinhala - English).This boosted the study of birds among students He appreciated the work of Mr Thilo Hoffmann specially in Saving Sinharaja and wrote the Foreword to the book `The Faithful Foreigner` the Bioraphy of Hoffmann. He is a great Conservationist and Bird lover who left his mark.

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  10. Upen and his family will always be revered in Kurunegala for their contribution to preserving the culture of the city. As a medical practitioner he had an amazing bed-side manner and was loved by his numerous patients, including our family. It was an honour to have known him.
    Franklyn Amerasinghe

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  11. A wonderful person. According to my handwritten journal kept while teaching for a year at a south coast public school in Sri Lanka as a young graduate Voluntary Service Overseas (VSO) English Language teacher, entry dated Sat. April 13, 1974 at Ohiya, after an overnight stay at a hospitable local tea planter’s bungalow:
    “A gorgeous sunny morning … at 10am I got a lift to the Horton Plains with a Dr. de Zylva from Kurunegala, who is a leading wildlife photographer in Sri Lanka (see his 1974 calendar). On the way, he stopped to photograph an embankment of daisies, for he is also an expert on flora. Eventually, after much twisting and turning uphill to some 7000’, we reached the ‘patnas’ of the Plains, where Samuel Baker once hunted elephants by the thousand. Leaving the doctor, I walked some two miles to Little World’s End … thick cloud obscured the view, affording only temporary glimpses of the jungle below and none of the reportedly breathtaking scenery beyond. I sat on a rock near sone brilliant rhododendron flowers, and being unable to survey the wondrous scenery, puffed on a cigarette instead.”

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  12. Sorry, forgot to state my name with earlier comment. I now reside in BC, Canada. Age 71 last birthday.

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