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Giving Gibbons a New Life
Phuket's
Gibbon Rehabilitation Project
Most
of these animals were captured as babies - by shooting their mothers. On
becoming adult at about six years old ther wild instincts emerged, and their
owners could no longer handle them.
The
Gibbon Rehabilitation Project at the Bang Pae Waterfall in the Khae Phra
Thaew Wildlife and Forest Reserve was founded in 1992 by the late Terrence
Dillon Morin, an American, with the object of returning as many gibbons as
possible to the wild. The animals disappeared from the forests of Phuket in
the 1980s. Located 10 kms east of the Two Sisters Monument along the road
that passes the National Museum, its easy to find, and offers a rare insight
into the lives of some of mankind’s most unfortunate relatives.
These
lesser (according to size) apes, three species of which are native to
Thailand and one a native of Phuket, had committed the perhaps mortal sin of
being viewed by humans as incredibly cute when young. For this they were
hunted down and whole families wiped out so that a gibbon youngster could be
sold to a human family or tourist attraction as a pet, and earn 6,000 baht
for forest hunters. People who smuggled them out of the country could make
300.000 baht.
An
even greater threat to the animals is the degradation of their forest homes.
Thailand loses 3,000 gibbons a year this way. All three species of gibbons
in Thailand are listed on Appendix I of the Convention on International
Trade in Endangered Species and it has been illegal to take a gibbon out the
wild since 1992.
GRP
was founded because so many gibbons were being held as pets in bars and at
other tourist attractions in Phuket and around Thailand. The work of the GRP
is financed almost exclusively through the donations of tourists who visit
the rehabilitation site in the forest. Young enthusiastic guides explain the
work of the project to visitors from seemingly every country under the sun
in a 25-minute tour, which features a brief stand on an observation platform
where visitors can see pretty clearly some of the animals who have not yet
been moved to more isolated and larger cages higher up the hill. |