Wildlife/Human Conflict Solutions

Living with Primates

October 20, 2016

When you Encounter Baboons...

on October 20, 2016
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Labels: DPG PRIMATES, FOR RESIDENTS - HOW TO LIVE WITH OUR WILD PRIMATE NEIGHBORS
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This site was created with one objective: to provide a platform for those seeking primate related information. Although it is a blog site, and comments are read and sometimes added, it is not our intention to have an interactive blog. Residents wanting to liase on how to co-exist with monkeys or baboons, please contact us via email. Given the stats data we receive, many people from all over the world visit our site daily, particularly the slide show on how to co-exist with wild primates. We welcome you all and thank you for popping by.

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Chacma baboons (Papio cynocephalus ursinus) and vervets (Chlorocebus pygerythrus)...

...are two of five species of indigenous primates in South Africa. Although an important part of our natural heritage, they are severely persecuted. Being hunted as pests by farmers, their habitats are shrinking due to the constant expansion of human settlements and the danger of busy traffic on roads, which cross the land on which they lived a long time before us.

Babies of killed mothers are often taken as pets, which is not a sustainable solution as they generally start to bite when they grow up - this is part of a monkey's language but is far magnified by the trauma of being controlled in a captive situation. Wild vervet monkeys do NOT bite humans, yet the vervet monkey has been tainted with a reputation as a biter because when kept and confined as a pet, and when humanised this way, they start to bite to protest that fact that their lives are being controlled or to jostle for a place in the hierarchy.

It is impossible for a human to meet the social needs of a monkey; pets invariably end up with mental trauma and behavioural problems. And the people who have taken them in as pets unfortunately discover that their "love" for their pet has ensured the monkey a miserable life.
Loving these animals involves giving them what is best for them above serving our own needs. The vervet monkey is a highly social animal needing a full social life among their own kind and a protective environment in a wild area, as free from human interference, as possible.

Here we are offering solutions to help primates and people as well:

1) Short term ones: Rehabilitation center, which at the moment cares for orphaned and injured monkeys. Future plans are to return them back to their place in nature…and…

2) Long term ones: to break down the many misunderstandings that have been passed down through the centuries about these primates so that people can gain an understanding that they are not our enemies, and that if we know them, we don't need to be afraid of them. And to understand that with some tolerance and patience, it is quite possible to learn to live in harmony. By communication with the authorities, we hope to work towards changing protective legislation which is insufficient at the moment.

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