Building a Modern Ark

Joel Sartore wants a close-up of every captive species on earth鈥攁s many as 12,000 animals鈥攂efore it's too late.

Explore an interactive grid of some of the photos in the Photo Ark. 

Joel Sartore still remembers the feel of his bare feet sinking into the soggy carpet. It was the fall of 2005, and he was standing in a leaky trailer that passed for a hotel in Kaktovic, Alaska, where he had come to photograph a National Geographic about leasing out Alaska鈥檚 North Slope for energy extraction.

An elaborate plan to photograph a wild polar bear feeding on a whale carcass was underway, but for three days he鈥檇 been socked in by blustery winds and bad weather. So he was on the phone with his wife, Kathy, telling her the shoot was going to take longer than he thought. 鈥淭here was this pause on the other end of the line,鈥 Sartore recounted. A few minutes later he was asking, 鈥淎re you saying you鈥檙e going to divorce me because I鈥檓 gone too much?鈥

He told her how expensive the trip had been; how tremendous the shot would be if he got it; how it might be the only opportunity he鈥檇 ever have to photograph a polar bear.

All good excuses, she told him.

鈥淪o I packed up and I went home to Nebraska the next day,鈥 he said.

Nine weeks later Kathy was diagnosed with advanced breast cancer. For the next year, while she was going through chemotherapy, Sartore discovered what it was like to raise three children. Until then he hadn鈥檛 even changed a diaper on his two-year-old; he was too busy chasing the next story. 鈥淚 was so bad that once I tried to convince Kathy鈥檚 midwife to induce labor to get me out on the road the next day,鈥 he said. After his wife鈥檚 diagnosis, life ground to an unfamiliar halt.

鈥淚 was like a cat in a cage, pacing around,鈥 he told me. 鈥淚 needed to shoot something.鈥 He tried fruit and flowers, things he could find around the house. But when that didn鈥檛 cut it, he went to the local zoo. On Kathy鈥檚 good days, he shot portraits of animals on black or white backgrounds at the Lincoln Children鈥檚 Zoo. First a naked mole rat. Then two poison dart frogs. Soon he was clicking through the zoo鈥檚 collection.

After a while, Sartore showed some of the work to National Geographic photo editor Kathy Moran. Seeing the potential in those photos and knowing his passion for conservation stories, she asked if he would like to use the technique for a piece on America鈥檚 endangered species. 鈥淭hat assignment was a really good way to come back after Kathy got healthy,鈥 Sartore said.

Still, it wasn鈥檛 a strong start. 鈥淲hen the pictures started coming in they were a bit clumsy,鈥 Moran remembered. And understandably, she said. 鈥淗ere鈥檚 this guy who was used to being out in the field. He was first and foremost a photojournalist, which isn鈥檛 about making things happen; it鈥檚 about capturing moments as they evolve in front of you. Now he was taking all that energy and talent and turning it toward something that was completely new.鈥

The tight constraints of working with captive animals presented a huge learning curve, Moran said. 鈥淲hen I look back at those first images, they weren鈥檛 as sophisticated as they have become. Some were really engaging, and others were a little flat. I think there was a worry that our readers weren鈥檛 going to connect with this kind of photography. That鈥檚 when we started blending Joel鈥檚 two skill sets: isolating a couple of these species and then looking at 鈥攈abitat destruction, invasive species, whatever it happened to be. It created a balance, and we鈥檝e continued to use that model whenever we put these stories forth.鈥

After the endangered species assignment, Sartore just kept going, launching into a project he now calls the . Funded by sales of his wildlife prints, a and speaking fees, and with hopes of finding a major sponsor, his collection of portraits has become an ambitious effort to document all captive species on earth. He estimates there are as many as 12,000 species in captivity in the world鈥檚 zoos and aquariums, and so far he has photographed 4,320 of them. 鈥淚鈥檒l keep going until I drop,鈥 he told me. 鈥淚 figure another 10 or 15 years鈥攖hat鈥檒l get us there. What began as just a way for me to continue shooting became this big, epic project that I鈥檓 going to devote basically my entire working life to.鈥

The first time I saw Sartore beating the drum for the Ark was at the historic 1920s Golden State Theatre in Monterey, California, where he was preparing to take the stage to talk about what it鈥檚 like to be a big-shot photographer. Sartore, 52, stepped from behind the curtain, wearing a brown sports jacket, dark pants, and dress shoes. Right away he addressed some of the big questions people always ask: Best place he鈥檚 ever been? 鈥淎ntarctica,鈥 he told the audience. 鈥淚t鈥檚 as pristine as it always was. No contrails. And the animals are fearless of humans.鈥

Next: Any near-death experiences? 鈥淵eah, I鈥檝e had my scary moments.鈥 Like when he was repeatedly charged by an angry muskox; when a polar bear tried to pry him out of a van; when a caiman bit through the dome of his underwater housing in the Pantanal; and when his plane nearly crashed into the Gulf of Mexico. Along the way there have also been drunken cowboys, angry loggers, snarling mad dogs. 鈥淏ad dogs make great pictures,鈥 he said.

And: How do you get a job like this? 鈥淚 started out in college taking pictures of things that were weird, or unusual, or just funny. If I鈥檓 asked to do a story on America鈥檚 state fairs, I know to go for things that are visually loaded,鈥 he said, advancing his photos on a big screen. Like the creepy mother-daughter look-alike contest in Iowa or the cockroach tractor pull in Indiana. He paused. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 care if it鈥檚 people at state fairs or grizzly bears鈥攁 good picture鈥檚 a good picture. You want people to read the captions. You want them to learn.鈥

Sartore has traveled to plenty of exotic places, on all seven continents, but what he really wants to do more than anything else is visit zoos and aquariums to photograph animals. Because he鈥檚 not just photographing interesting subjects anymore鈥攈e鈥檚 on a mission. 鈥淚 call this project the Photo Ark,鈥 he told his audience, showing a larger-than-life tiger made even bigger against an ebony backdrop. 鈥淚 use the backgrounds because it isolates the animal, lets you look them in the eye. And it gives equal weight to all creatures, great and small. It shows the beauty and grace and power in a mouse鈥攈e is no less important than a polar bear. They鈥檙e both the same size in these pictures.鈥

He flipped to another slide, a Rabb鈥檚 fringe-limbed tree frog, very likely the last of its kind. 鈥淥ne-third to one-half of all amphibians are going to go extinct in the next 10 years,鈥 he said. 鈥淧arts of South America have already lost 40 percent of their amphibian diversity. To lose even one species, it鈥檚 tragic.鈥

Sartore finds comfort in the species that have thus far been rescued from the brink: giant pandas, black-footed ferrets, California Condors, Whooping Cranes. Those animals鈥 populations remain alarmingly low鈥攊n the mere hundreds鈥攂ut they might have disappeared altogether if not for publicity, their natural charisma, and determined efforts to save them. 鈥淚t鈥檚 tough to get people to pay attention, because it just doesn鈥檛 affect their daily lives. They figure, Why should I care if a rabbit or ? Is it going to affect what I make at work? Or is it going to affect my love life? Not in the short term. But I tell you, it鈥檚 really folly to think that you can doom everything else to extinction and not have it come back to bite us hard.鈥

When the lights went up, the crowd applauded, and Sartore moved to the lobby to answer questions and sign books. The next day we drove over to the Monterey Bay Aquarium to meet an named Makana.

Behind two sets of doors and down the hall from an exam room where an otter was having a post-partum physical, there was a quiet conference room set up with lights, tripods, bags of camera lenses, and a small blue box containing a Horned Puffin. 鈥檚 associate curator of birds, Aimee Greenebaum, carefully opened the box. Out popped , a pudgy black-and-white, football-size bird with a chunky yellow bill and those eponymous spikes above its eyes.

Sartore sat on a plastic office chair at the opening of a white fabric box positioned at the end of a table. In went the puffin, scratching the bottom of the box as it tried to get a foothold. Sartore peeked inside and slid a pair of black and white mats under the bird, with the black on top. 鈥淚 want to make sure I have a good face shot,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hen we鈥檒l try the white.鈥

He ran his hand through his hair, hunched over his camera, and ducked under a black sheet. The shutter sounded like the deliberate punching of keys on an old typewriter: Thack, thack. Thack. He looked at the camera. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not great. He鈥檚 walking around a lot.鈥 Then slipped under the sheet again.

Next up was a Laysan Albatross. 鈥淢akana鈥檚 coming! Makana鈥檚 coming,鈥 shouted the aquarium鈥檚 communications content manager, Karen Jeffries. 鈥淕et ready. Okay, bring her in.鈥

, a big, white-headed seabird with long, narrow wings and a stout neck, was rolled into the room sitting atop a waist-high cart pushed by aviculturist Nat Wong. Makana is one of the aquarium鈥檚 star performers, known for occasionally trying to court men鈥攅specially if they鈥檙e tall鈥攊n typical albatross fashion: bobbing her neck, clacking, and pointing her beak. She鈥檚 even been flown on a private jet to be a guest on The Ellen DeGeneres Show.

It was Wong who, after hearing Sartore speak at a conference, approached him to come shoot Makana and the other animals in the aquarium鈥檚 collection. 鈥淗e鈥檚 helping all these animals to be seen and be heard, and I think that鈥檚 important,鈥 Wong told me. 

For the rest of the afternoon there was a revolving line of blue boxes: Black Oystercatcher, Dunlin, Western Snowy Plover and six fuzzy chicks, Least Sandpiper, Red-necked Phalarope, , Sanderling, Short-billed Dowitcher,

By the time Sartore climbed into his car, tired and hungry, the sun was beginning to set over Monterey Bay. 鈥淲e shot 911 frames, 13 types of birds, and 6 chicks,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t was a good day鈥攁nd nobody died or got injured.鈥

Sartore obsesses over using his work to make a difference, and he鈥檚 not opposed to staging a picture if it gets the point across. He once made that showed 45 dead koalas of all ages and sizes strewn across a blue tarp, every one of them, including a mother curled up with her baby, killed by domestic dogs. The photo went viral, helping to raise attention to the plight of koalas. A few months later the Australian government declared the koala imperiled and designated protections. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 say that a picture did that,鈥 said Sartore, 鈥渂ut I like to think it helped.鈥

When he got word from someone at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service saying the Florida Grasshopper Sparrow was on the edge of extinction, Sartore called 爆料公社. 鈥淭he biologists told me the bird really needed media attention; everyone had pretty much written it off鈥攊t鈥檚 just a little brown bird, and it lives in the few remnant prairies left in central Florida.鈥 Sartore took the pictures and Ted Williams wrote the story (鈥淥n the Edge,鈥 March-April 2013). 鈥淭he cover said, 鈥楨nd of the Line?鈥 鈥 Sartore said. 鈥淎nd what do you know鈥攊t worked.鈥

After the article, the agency鈥檚 $20,000 to $30,000 budget to preserve the bird got bumped to nearly $1.3 million to save it. 鈥淛oel鈥檚 work was instrumental,鈥 said FWS biologist Sandra Sneckenberger. 鈥淧eople think extinctions are happening in faraway places, but Joel can make it very real with his photos of endemic species that are on the brink.鈥

Sartore knows saving the sparrow is a race against time. 鈥淏ut it beats doing nothing. Because we know what the alternative was鈥攃ertain extinction. So that gives us hope. Now we need to do that for every species in trouble.鈥

The sad truth is that some species will be gone from the wild before he can even take their picture鈥攖he Javan rhino, for instance, with as few as 35 animals existing in nature. Still, if Sartore does manage to photograph upwards of 12,000 species, it will be an incredible feat, providing the biggest photographic archive of biodiversity ever created.

And if he can鈥檛 last long enough to complete the Ark, then his son Cole will. 鈥淗e鈥檚 got a great eye,鈥 Sartore said. 鈥淵ou know, John James 爆料公社鈥檚 son, John Woodhouse, picked up [his painting] and finished the quadrupeds when 爆料公社鈥檚 mind started to go. Cole would do a great job. He鈥檚 been with me enough. He knows how it鈥檚 done.鈥

Cole, who is 20, doesn鈥檛 own a camera; his thing is video. But he says he would take up the baton. 鈥淚f something were to happen, I do see how important it is to finish,鈥 Cole told me. 鈥淚 hope he鈥檚 around for many decades to come and that he can take care of it. But if he can鈥檛, I would.鈥

Last year Cole got cancer鈥擧odgkin鈥檚 lymphoma, stage 3. Fortunately, his chemo worked, and the doctors say if he goes for five years without a recurrence, he鈥檒l essentially be cured. Meanwhile, his mom, Kathy, remains healthy. She and Sartore now have an agreement about how much time he can be away. 鈥淲hen we first talked about the deal, it was supposed to be two weeks, maximum,鈥 Kathy said. 鈥淭hen he stretched it to 21 days, and I agreed. Now it鈥檚 been pushed to 24 or 25 days鈥攁nd no more than half a year. That鈥檚 the deal.鈥

Sartore is trying to keep that promise. The last I heard from him, he was headed for the Louisville Zoo, where there鈥檚 a pair of woolly monkeys鈥攖he only ones in captivity in North America. Then on to St. Louis for a Horned Guan, which he describes as 鈥渁 turkey wearing a party hat.鈥 The guan is an endangered species, threatened by logging, fire, and agriculture that are destroying its habitat in Central America. It would make an incredible photograph, he said, and he was armed with a plus-size fabric photo box sturdy enough to hold the bird for its close-up. 鈥淚鈥檝e got the big tent,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd I鈥檓 not afraid to use it.鈥