January 28, 2012
rhamphotheca:

Near Extinct Spider Monkey Spotted in Colombia
by OurAmazingPlanet staff
Researchers have spotted one of the rarest primates on Earth in a national park in Colombia. A subspecies of the brown spider monkey (A. h. brunneus) was  seen in Colombia’s Selva de Florencia National Park, the only national  protected area with a confirmed population of the critically endangered monkeys.
When the park was created in 2005, the only known A. h. brunneus in the region was living in captivity, and the monkeys were thought extinct in the area.
Yet in November 2011, a local farmer reported the possible presence of  the species, setting off a furious search for the rare primates, during  which park officials and researchers with the Wildlife Conservation  Society spotted at least two individuals living in Selva de Florencia…
(read more: Live Science)   (photo: Nestor Roncancio/WCS)

rhamphotheca:

Near Extinct Spider Monkey Spotted in Colombia

by OurAmazingPlanet staff

Researchers have spotted one of the rarest primates on Earth in a national park in Colombia. A subspecies of the brown spider monkey (A. h. brunneus) was seen in Colombia’s Selva de Florencia National Park, the only national protected area with a confirmed population of the critically endangered monkeys.

When the park was created in 2005, the only known A. h. brunneus in the region was living in captivity, and the monkeys were thought extinct in the area.

Yet in November 2011, a local farmer reported the possible presence of the species, setting off a furious search for the rare primates, during which park officials and researchers with the Wildlife Conservation Society spotted at least two individuals living in Selva de Florencia…

(read more: Live Science)   (photo: Nestor Roncancio/WCS)

January 2, 2012
Critically Endangered Spider Monkey Born At Twycross Zoo

Born December 8, these are the early pictures of a new baby Veriegated Spider Monkey at the UK’s Twycross Zoo. This is the first Spider monkey baby born there in 10 years. And as you can see, the baby’s mum takes good care to cradle her baby when outdoors. At times, the whole family gathers round while the baby sleeps, secure on it’s mother’s shoulder.

Veriegated Spider monkeys are critically endangered due to habitat loss, hunting and the pet trade and are listed as one of the 25 most endangered primates by IUCW. It’s estimated that over 90% of their natural habitat in northern Columbia and north-western Venezuelais is already gone and of the approximately 60 Spider monkeys in Eurpoean zoos, there were no births in the year of May 2009-2010. That makes this baby a very valuable and important addition to the remaining population.

From ZooBorns

December 6, 2011
World’s Most Endangered Primate Still Losing Habitat

Just twenty-three Hainan gibbons (Nomascus hainanus) survive in the world. Confined to a single protected area on a lone island, Hainan gibbons are losing their habitat at a steady rate of 20 hectares per day finds a new study by Greenpeace. In all, nearly a quarter of the Critically Endangered lesser ape’s habitat has been lost since 2001.

Researchers employed satellite imagery and field work to document illegal forest destruction on the island, largely for pulp and paper plantations. Although there are laws against such forest destruction, they are not enforced.

“This illegal deforestation comes in response to market demand and disrespect for nature,” Yi Lan, forests campaigner with Greenpeace, said in a press release. “In this case, the local government has the ability to stop the rainforests and the gibbons from disappearing from Hainan.”

There are no Hainan gibbons in captivity. Once widespread across Hainan Island, the nearly two dozen gibbons surviving today are found only in the Bawangling Nature Reserve on the island’s western side. Just over fifty years ago—before the forests were logged and turned into plantations—scientists believe there were likely 2,000 Hainan gibbons.

From mongabay.com

Awful. 23? Well, at least we have paper and cardboard packaging, right? Makes me so angry. — PrimateWin x 

November 29, 2011
Fresh Wave Of Killings By Hunters Takes Indonesian Orangutan To The Brink Of Extinction

Conservationists have called on the Indonesian authorities to take urgent action to save the orangutan after a report warned that the endangered great apes were being hunted at a rate that could bring them to the brink of extinction.

Erik Meijaard, who led a team carrying out the first attempt to assess the scale of the problem in Kalimantan, the Indonesian part of Borneo, said the results showed that between 750 and 1,800 orangutans were killed as a result of hunting and deforestation in the 12 months to April 2008.

The numbers, which were higher than expected, indicated that most orangutan populations in Kalimantan could be in serious danger “within the foreseeable future”, said Meijaard, of the Jakarta-based People and Nature Consulting International. “At that rate… you’re talking about 10-15 years until pretty much all orangutans [in Kalimantan] are gone.”

Home to 90% of the world’s orangutans, Indonesia also has one of the highest rates of deforestation – a phenomenon driven by a combination of illegal logging, palm oil plantations and gold mining. Loss of habitat is the main reason behind the steep decline in both the Bornean orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus) and its critically endangered Sumatran counterpart (Pongo abelii). The Sumatran orangutan population is believed to be less than 7,000 and has featured on the World’s 25 Most Endangered Primates list since its inception in 2000. In Borneo, an estimated 54,000 orangutans survive, half the number of 25 years ago.

Habitat loss is compounded by hunting, which, though anecdotally well known as a cause of orangutan decline, has been a neglected issue. While much of the killing documented by Meijaard and his researchers appears to have been motivated by opportunism, with villagers hunting for food, a significant proportion could be related to habitat loss. “There is conflict-related hunting where you’ve got plantations going in. You’ve got people expanding their fields and gardens and infringing on orangutan habitat, so they are being squeezed into smaller and smaller pockets of forest and automatically come into contact with people more frequently,” Meijaard said.

“If you find an orangutan sitting in your garden or eating the fruit from your fruit tree or pulling up your oil palm, the logical reaction is either to scare it off or to kill it. That’s what people do.”

To tackle the fall in orangutan populations, the Indonesian authorities had to crack down on those responsible for habitat degradation so that the Bornean forests were “better managed”, according to Meijaard. Equally important was the need to curb the hunting of orangutans by raising awareness of their endangered status – and enforcing the law when such hunting was found, he said.

“So far in the entire history of orangutan conservation, I think only two people in Indonesia have ended up in jail because of illegal activities related to orangutans,” Meijaard said.

Only days after his survey was published last week, two Indonesian plantation workers were arrested on suspicion of killing at least 20 orangutans and proboscis monkeys. Police said the men admitted chasing the primates with dogs before shooting, stabbing or hacking them to death, but claimed they were offered money for every kill by the owners of palm oil plantations keen to reduce crop raiding. If found guilty, the workers face up to five years in prison.

Ashley Leiman, of the London-based Orangutan Foundation, agreed that better law enforcement must be the priority in the fight to save the species. “There should be more awareness, there should be more education and definitely… more enforcement,” she said, accusing the Indonesian authorities of a “very lax” approach. Leiman believed the current laws were almost impossible to implement. “You almost have to find people in the very act of doing it,” she said.

A spokesman for the Indonesian forestry ministry has described the report’s findings as “bombastic” and said he doubted they were true.

But the hunting issue should not distract from the primary threat of forest degradation, which was the root cause of conflict-related hunting, said Leiman. “When you take the combination of both, the problem is totally compounded. But it goes back to the original problem [of habitat loss],” she said, adding that the Indonesian government needed to create more protected areas if forest loss continued at the present rate.

Scaremongering was counterproductive, she said. “I don’t believe orangutans will be extinct. I think as a species they will survive. They may only survive in protected areas, and probably in smaller numbers than now, but I don’t think the ‘cry wolf’ [approach] is going to help.”

From The Guardian

November 4, 2011
Wobbly Little Langur Monkey Steps Outside With Mum

There’s a bright new addition at ZSL London Zoo – a neon orange baby monkey. And Zooborns first introduced you to the baby HERE.

Keepers at the Zoo were delighted when first-time mum Lu Lu, a rare Francois Langur, gave birth to the flame-haired baby in early September. Baby Tango’s hair will gradually become black like Mom and Dad’s when the baby is about six months old. In the mean time, it makes the baby even easier to see when out in their habitat.

Francois Langurs are one of the world’s rarest monkeys, and originate from northeast Vietnam and China. Classed as critically endangered, their populations are declining rapidly because of habitat loss.


From ZooBorns

November 3, 2011

cocorachy:

A couple of photos from a fertility check on Dana the orangutan this evening. Late finish at work but definitely worth it. Amazing to get so close to a critically endangered animal, such as this. But also a bit sad to see such a powerful animal reduced to such a state. We had to dart her to put her under and transport her to the surgery. Once there we had a human gynecologist and anaesthetist in to do the procedure. They were pretty excited about it all. The good news is that although she had a still birth previously, after which she was shown to have blocked fallopian tubes, the blockage has now cleared. This means she should be staying at Durrell to try and breed from again. Had she remained infertile she would have been moved to a non-breeding group in France, which would have been a real shame as she has real character and is even know for her skills as an artist! She loves painting and her work fetches a tidy bit of money for the charity :O 

(Source: headisananimal, via fyeahgreatapes)

October 12, 2011
Baby Gorilla On Black Market For $40,000 Is Rescued

The black market for baby gorillas is growing, officials in the Democratic Republic of Congo said Tuesday, after a fourth incident this year led to the arrest of alleged poachers trying to sell one infant for $40,000.

This year marks “the highest number of baby gorillas confiscated from poachers in a single year on record,” the Congolese Wildlife Authority said in a statement.

“We are very concerned about a growing market for baby gorillas that is feeding a dangerous trafficking activity in rebel controlled areas,” said Emmanuel de Merode, warden of Congo’s Virunga National Park. “We are powerless to control the international trade in baby gorillas, but our rangers are doing everything they can to stamp it out on the ground.”

The park, Africa’s oldest, is home to mountain gorillas, lowland gorillas, chimpanzees, elephants and buffalo. The park has also seen fighting inside its borders and nearby during an ongoing 12-year civil war.

The four rescues so far this year, which happened between April and last Thursday, follow the one to two a year saved since 2003, when accurate records were first kept, park spokeswoman LuAnne Cadd told msnbc.com.

“If four have been caught since April, the question is how many have been missed?” she asked. “How many more are being captured and sold?”

The latest rescue came when Virunga rangers, acting on a tip, posed as potential buyers of the infant, an eastern lowland gorilla that was hidden inside a small backpack. The three suspects, who wanted $40,000, were arrested once the undercover rangers had possession of the gorilla.

“Like all the infant gorillas we see immediately after confiscation, he was extremely tense and stressed, holding his legs and arms tight up against his body, and turning his head away when he got too frightened,” said Jan Ramer, a veterinarian with the Mountain Gorilla Veterinarian Project (MGVP) who treated the gorilla afterwards.

Ranger Christian Shamavu, who headed the undercover operation, said that “it’s very likely that the mother and other gorillas were killed because it’s very difficult to take a baby gorilla from its family.”

De Merode said the selling price for infant gorillas can run from about $15,000 to $40,000.

“No one knows for certain who the buyers are,” Cadd said. “The suspicion is possibly for zoos in places like Russia, India; or wealthy people who have personal zoos of exotic animals.

“When poachers have been caught,” she added, “it is usually the supplier, or the middleman, but never the buyer.”

“The rescues are usually the result of tips,” Cadd noted. “Gorillas are in the top category of protected species here in Congo and so it is illegal to kill or take one. The punishment is 1-10 years depending on whether it’s a killing, which would result in the highest sentence, or if it’s a first, second, etc., offense on taking a gorilla.”

Poachers never admit to killing other gorillas to get to infants, Cadd said, “because the punishment for this is so much greater.”

Rescued baby gorillas are quarantined for 30 days while MGVP veterinarians run health checks. Eastern lowland gorillas, also known as Grauer’s gorillas, usually are then sent to an orphan gorilla sanctuary near the town of Butembo.

“Many of these infants are injured from ropes around their hands/feet or waist, and some are quite ill, which is not surprising, as they are generally in close contact with their human captors, extremely stressed, and with very poor nutrition,” said Ramer.

For now, the baby gorilla rescued last week is getting 24-hour care because he “is too young and vulnerable to be left alone,” Virunga National Park said in a blogpost.

Two caretakers “will even sleep with him at night on the same bed,” the park stated. “If you can imagine a human one-and-a-half year old, this baby is in a similar stage of life, and he needs some consistency in care in order to bond and feel safe.”

Cadd said it’s unlikely the orphan would be able to return to the wild and would instead spend its life in the sanctuary.

“It’s a heated topic among vets and conservationists,” she said. “Some think they should be put back and let nature take its course. Others say never when all experience shows that the babies just die. Others think that if you can create a family from the orphans with various ages, then releasing them together will work. And others worry about them carrying human diseases that they have built up immunities to back to the wild population of gorillas and creating a disaster of plague proportions.”

From msnbc.com

October 5, 2011
Escaped Gibbon Goes Walkabout In Central Hong Kong

A gibbon went walkabout in central Hong Kong Wednesday after giving zoo keepers the slip.

The endangered northern buffed-cheeked gibbon escaped while staff at the Hong Kong Zoological and Botanical Gardens were cleaning his enclosure early Wednesday, a government spokesman said.

The government-run zoological gardens are located in the central area of the city close to the main finance and shopping areas. A search was immediately launched and the gibbon was discovered about two hours later hiding under a car not far from the zoo.

It was shot with an anaesthetic dart by veterinarians and after an examination was returned to its enclosure. The species, Nomascus annamensis, was discovered last year in the rainforests of Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos.

From m&cnews

October 5, 2011
Great News! Mattel And Barbie Drop The Deforestation

You read that right – following over half a million emails sent by you, Barbie has realised that toying with deforestation is no game. Mattel, the company behind Barbie, has decided that being involved in the destruction of Indonesia’s rainforests is bad for business as well as the planet, and has dropped deforestation from its production line.

It was Barbie’s shameful deforestation habit that forced Ken to break up with her back in June: she had destroyed rainforest in her toy packaging. Mattel was using products from Asia Pulp and Paper (APP), a pulp and paper company notorious for destroying Indonesian rainforests, including the habitat of the endangered Sumatran tiger. Ken was understandably distraught.

It wasn’t pretty. But all the drama that followed - Ken’s shocking interview, a public Twitter feud between the former couple, the hunt for hundreds of Chainsaw Barbies hidden across the UK – has a silver lining. It helped bring the continuing destruction of Indonesia’s rainforests for pulp and paper out into the open and forced action.

Mattel recognized it couldn’t allow its supply chains to include products from deforestation and that toy packaging shouldn’t come at the costs of rainforests and tiger habitat.

As the largest toy company in the world, their new policy sends a message to other companies that to be a responsible business you must be vigilant about keeping deforestation out of your products. As part of its new commitments, Mattel has instructed its suppliers to avoid wood fibre from controversial sources, including companies “that are known to be involved in deforestation”. Mattel had already told its suppliers to avoid buying from APP, but this new policy goes much further and tackles deforestation across its whole supply chain.

The policy also aims to increase the amount of recycled paper used in their business, as well boosting the use of wood products certified by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC).

Of course, we’ll be keeping a close eye on Mattel’s progress to make sure it sticks to these commitments, and we’ll still be pushing other toy companies such as Hasbro and Disney to do the same.

Now you know Mattel and Barbie have committed to dropping deforestation, you probably have only one thing on your mind. Will Barbie and Ken get back together? We don’t want to speculate – but couldn’t help but notice that hostilities between the couple have ceased.

Here’s how the Ken and Barbie breakup drama happened:

As you can imagine, the public airing of Barbie’s dirty deforestation laundry was so traumatic that everyone involved probably needs some time to heal. But it has led to Mattel taking action against deforestation, adding to the pressure from other companies such as Nestlé, Unilever and Carrefour who are also taking action on these issues. These companies are committing to removing deforestation from their supply chains and from their products. And that’s worth some tears.

What does Mattel’s commitment mean for the rainforests and the habitat of the Sumatran tiger? It means that, by losing another high profile customer, APP is paying a heavy price for continuing to rely on destroying rainforests for pulp and paper. People don’t want to buy products that come from deforestation, and right now companies that want to be deforestation-free can’t use APP products. APP has to face these realities and change, just like its sister company palm oil supplier Golden Agri Resources, which has already made strong commitments to stop deforestation.

APP needs to make a similar move. We saw the tragic costs of how APP operates when we reported on the death of a Sumatran tiger on the border of an APP-owned concession.  In the last two weeks the Greenpeace Tiger Eye tour has been documenting continued deforestation by APP.

Our activists have exposed APP’s persistent attempts to greenwash its image and pass itself off as a company that cares and acts responsibly towards the environment. As long as APP continues to put its efforts into marketing campaigns that cover up the truth, rather than changing its practices, we’ll continue to expose its tricks.

And we know you’ll be there with us. Mattel’s new policy is all down to you. Your support is important to keeping attention on the plight of Indonesia’s rainforests - the habitat of endangered animals like the Sumatran tiger – thank you.

This really is great news. Primates such as the Sumatran Orangutan (and many other primates and species besides) have got that little bit more of a chance. Now if only we can stop the relentless march of Palm Oil plantations… — PrimateWin x