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Miller's Grizzled Langur no longer extinct!

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  • 22-01-2012 3:30pm
    #1
    Administrators, Computer Games Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 32,293 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭


    A bunch of researchers have stumbled across a living population of Miller's Grizzled Langurs in Indonesia.

    raremonkey.jpg?w=600&h=400&crop=1

    Scientists working deep in the jungle of Indonesia have proven that, sometimes, the best discoveries happen by accident.

    Hoping to capture images of orangutans and leopards, the team set up cameras in the Wehea Forest on the eastern tip of Borneo island in June, the Associated Press reported. But upon viewing the photos, the researchers were shocked to see extremely rare Miller’s Grizzled Langurs, which until now have never been photographed. Given the lack of preexisting images, the scientists initially struggled to confirm their startling discovery, but soon enough, the answer was clear.

    The creature once inhabited northeastern Borneo, along with the islands of Sumatra and Java and the Thai-Malay peninsula, the AP reported. But a 2005 field survey yielded no trace of the rare primate, and after years of damage from fires, agriculture and mining, Miller’s Grizzled Langurs were presumed extinct.

    Although the primates appear in several thousand of the recent images, the researchers have yet to determine how many individual langurs have actually been discovered. The next step? Sort through the photos, return to the forest, and begin counting monkeys.


    Source.


    This follows on from recent evidence emerging that the Javan Tiger may also still be around.


Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 9,739 ✭✭✭Birdnuts


    Tis good news all right - I would feel more optimistic about its future though if Indonesia got to grips with the level of corruption in its forestry Dept which appears to now rival the days of the Suharto regime:(


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,739 ✭✭✭Birdnuts


    Birdnuts wrote: »
    Tis good news all right - I would feel more optimistic about its future though if Indonesia got to grips with the level of corruption in its forestry Dept which appears to now rival the days of the Suharto regime:(

    http://wwf.panda.org/wwf_news/?203227


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