BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jakarta, TAG — Scientists working in the dense jungles of Indonesia have
“rediscovered” a large, gray monkey so rare it was believed by many to be
extinct.
They
were all the more baffled to find the Miller’s Grizzled Langur — its black face
framed by a fluffy, Dracula-esque white collar — in an area well outside its
previously recorded home range.
The
team set up camera traps in the Wehea Forest on the eastern tip of Borneo
island in June, hoping to captures images of clouded leopards, orangutans and
other wildlife known to congregate at several mineral salt licks.
The
pictures that came back caught them all by surprise: groups of monkeys none had
ever seen.
With
virtually no photographs of the grizzled langurs in existence, it at first was
a challenge to confirm their suspicions, said Brent Loken, a Ph.D. student at
Simon Fraser University in Canada, and one of the lead researchers.
The
only images out there were museum sketches.
“We
were all pretty ecstatic, the fact that, wow, this monkey still lives, and also
that it’s in Wehea,” said Loken.
The
monkey, which has hooded eyes and a pinkish nose and lips, once roamed the
northeastern part of Borneo, as well as the islands of Sumatra and Java and the
Thai-Malay peninsula. But concerns were voiced several years ago that they may
be extinct.
Forests
where the monkeys once lived had been destroyed by fires, human encroachment
and conversion of land for agriculture and mining and an extensive field survey
in 2005 turned up empty.
“For
me the discovery of this monkey is representative of so many species in
Indonesia,” Loken told The Associated Press by telephone.
“There
are so many animals we know so little about and their home ranges are
disappearing so quickly,” he said. “It feels like a lot of these animals are
going to quickly enter extinction.”
The
next step will be returning to the 90,000 acre (38,000 hectare) forest to try
to find out how many grizzly langurs there are, according to the team of local
and international scientists, who published their findings in the American
Journal of Primatology on Friday.
They
appear in more than 4,000 images captured over a two-month period, said Loken,
but it’s possible one or two families kept returning.
“We
are trying to find out all we can,” he said. “But it really feels like a race
against time.”
Experts
not involved in the study were hugely encouraged.
“It’s
indeed a highly enigmatic species,” said Erik Meijaard, a conservation
scientist who spent more than eight years doing field research in the area.
In
the past they were hunted to near extinction for their meat and bezoar
“stones,” he said, which can, on occasion, be found in their guts.
Bezoars,
as Harry Potter fans know from lectures given by Prof. Snape to first year
students, are believed by some to neutralize poison.
Meijaard
said the animal has long been considered a subspecies of the Hose’s Leaf
Monkey, which also occurs on the Malaysian side of Borneo, but it now looks
like that may not be the case.
“We think it might actually be a distinct species,” he
said, “which would make the Wehea discovery even more important.”[]
Monkey Long Believed Extinct Found in Borneo Jungles
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
January 22, 2012
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