-Caveat Lector-

Global extinction looming for Indochina's primates

By DENIS D. GRAY, Associated Press

DEY AMBIL, Cambodia (June 3, 2001 12:35 p.m. EDT) - Within eyesight
of a sign urging "Don't sell wildlife," a roadside vendor is peddling four slow
lorises - little primates with sad luminous eyes - to be burned alive and
churned into Chinese medicines.

A gibbon, says Sem Sovan, can be ordered for $200 and delivered while
customers wait at his ramshackle hut, squirming with snakes, mynah birds
and other illegal "products" from nearby Kirirom National Park.

Once an Eden for primates, Cambodia along with neighboring Vietnam
and Laos, are being rapidly emptied of these creatures by meat poachers,
traditional medicine merchants and villagers encroaching on their ranges.

Remarkably, not a single species of primates, man's closest relative in the
animal kingdom, was lost in the last century. But global extinction is
looming, and it is likely to occur first in Indochina, says Frank Momberg of
Fauna and Flora International.

Four of the 25 apes, monkeys, lemurs and other primates listed by the U.S.-
based Conservation International as possibly facing extirpation are found in
Vietnam.

Only some 100 individuals on a single island remain of the Cat Ba Island
golden-headed langur while less than 200 Tonkin snub-nosed monkeys,
hunted for the medicine trade, hang on in two areas of Vietnam, Momberg
says. Almost as vulnerable are Delacour's langur and the gray-shanked
douc langur.

"The chances of them seeing the end of the century are slim," he says of
the Hainan gibbon, perhaps the world's most endangered primate which
lives in a few scattered places in Vietnam and on the Chinese island of
Hainan. A tiny gene pool - less than 50 individuals - survives.

To avert extinction, conservationists stress, there must be active population
management, including captive breeding, and above all safe, sufficiently
large natural habitat - a shrinking commodity throughout Indochina.

Even the Cardamon Mountains of southwestern Cambodia, long protected
by war, malaria and their remote location, are threatened along with what is
probably the world's largest population of pileated gibbon.

Preliminary surveys show the mountains shelter several hundred to 1,000 of
these gibbons, whose haunting songs once frequently resounded through
the jungles of Cambodia, Thailand and Laos. Now they are often death
warrants.

Ian Baird, a Canadian conservationist, recalls hearing a female singing one
dawn in the Cardamons, a hunter tracking the sound, then silence.

Baird witnessed the subsequent "processing," the animal's skin sold, the
meat eaten and the bones used for so-called medicine. Adult gibbons are
also killed so their babies can be easily snatched for pets.

Momberg, Indochina program manager at Fauna and Flora International,
hopes he has found one formula for salvation.

In a mountain forest of northern Vietnam, the England-based FFI is seeking
to preserve the western black crested gibbon by involving a half dozen poor
tribal villages in their fate.

"A reserve is not enough. We need the communities," Momberg says. "If
the community doesn't want to care for them that's the end."

Momberg wants the villagers around the Che Thao forest to establish the
boundaries of the reserve and select the rangers. A weekly radio program,
which includes conservation news, has been started and former wildlife
traders have been converted to teachers.

"These people don't know they are harboring a gibbon that exists nowhere
else," he says. "But they can develop a pride that they are hosting the only
population in the world."

A mortal danger to these gibbons and other primates in Indochina is the
area's proximity to China, where the appetite for exotic meat, medicine and
aphrodisiacs seems insatiable, and growing as the country's economic
prosperity increases.

Thousands of primates which once chattered and sang in Indochina's
jungles are reduced to powdered bones, dried feet, blood and wine
concoctions and monkey brains on Chinese plates.

In the sweltering, pungent bowels of Phnom Penh's Chinatown, around
Orasay Market, skins of slow lorises lie artistically draped over jute bags in
open-fronted shops. Sem Sovan, the wildlife vendor, says he sells about 10
a month to Chinese medicine traders in the Cambodian capital for $50
apiece.

He says that burning them alive increases the potency of the medicine, and
drinking their blood mixed with rice wine is great for stomach aches.


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