Berliner Boersenzeitung - The race to save the Amazon's bushy-bearded monkeys

EUR -
AED 4.030943
AFN 78.715869
ALL 99.459757
AMD 429.225042
ANG 1.96466
AOA 1005.262378
ARS 1180.003954
AUD 1.810791
AWG 1.97815
AZN 1.866139
BAM 1.961874
BBD 2.219613
BDT 133.563535
BGN 1.956201
BHD 0.41345
BIF 3266.938701
BMD 1.097448
BND 1.480864
BOB 7.61257
BRL 6.490851
BSD 1.099324
BTN 94.373336
BWP 15.462014
BYN 3.597637
BYR 21509.978545
BZD 2.208177
CAD 1.554524
CDF 3150.772669
CHF 0.940239
CLF 0.028341
CLP 1087.582276
CNY 8.020807
CNH 8.056579
COP 4820.265473
CRC 557.799086
CUC 1.097448
CUP 29.082369
CVE 110.607459
CZK 25.213097
DJF 195.759673
DKK 7.466257
DOP 69.135947
DZD 146.676116
EGP 56.394004
ERN 16.461718
ETB 145.518602
FJD 2.555901
FKP 0.849927
GBP 0.85804
GEL 3.017762
GGP 0.849927
GHS 17.038911
GIP 0.849927
GMD 78.466168
GNF 9513.368317
GTQ 8.485194
GYD 230.666284
HKD 8.527856
HNL 28.126597
HRK 7.538912
HTG 143.826965
HUF 406.403601
IDR 18508.513452
ILS 4.124102
IMP 0.849927
INR 94.277852
IQD 1440.084992
IRR 46202.556051
ISK 144.907069
JEP 0.849927
JMD 173.368358
JOD 0.777981
JPY 161.890573
KES 142.11639
KGS 95.294368
KHR 4399.059051
KMF 494.40198
KPW 987.703096
KRW 1616.189727
KWD 0.337797
KYD 0.916153
KZT 576.294809
LAK 23804.135453
LBP 99098.454527
LKR 327.432738
LRD 219.858717
LSL 21.294921
LTL 3.240478
LVL 0.663836
LYD 6.096988
MAD 10.480249
MDL 19.501914
MGA 5130.932993
MKD 61.640757
MMK 2304.443984
MNT 3850.518819
MOP 8.796897
MRU 43.744344
MUR 49.60076
MVR 16.896071
MWK 1906.219348
MXN 22.593697
MYR 4.91983
MZN 70.137591
NAD 21.295115
NGN 1718.603483
NIO 40.449526
NOK 11.90191
NPR 151.001277
NZD 1.957573
OMR 0.422475
PAB 1.099304
PEN 4.045864
PGK 4.471968
PHP 62.750422
PKR 308.222928
PLN 4.278801
PYG 8800.407936
QAR 4.007207
RON 4.97868
RSD 117.16136
RUB 94.550357
RWF 1550.013228
SAR 4.120295
SBD 9.126741
SCR 16.117932
SDG 659.016165
SEK 10.941374
SGD 1.478668
SHP 0.862422
SLE 24.966985
SLL 23012.934611
SOS 628.250896
SRD 40.236797
STD 22714.95548
SVC 9.618957
SYP 14268.846672
SZL 21.2883
THB 37.974441
TJS 11.943871
TMT 3.841068
TND 3.372341
TOP 2.570334
TRY 41.708399
TTD 7.450271
TWD 36.208063
TZS 2935.672643
UAH 45.11038
UGX 4085.68721
USD 1.097448
UYU 46.30167
UZS 14233.198091
VES 80.405639
VND 28473.285375
VUV 134.017661
WST 3.072388
XAF 658.000276
XAG 0.036427
XAU 0.000365
XCD 2.965908
XDR 0.818341
XOF 658.006291
XPF 119.331742
YER 269.587924
ZAR 21.323984
ZMK 9878.34633
ZMW 30.753779
ZWL 353.377771
  • RBGPF

    60.2700

    60.27

    +100%

  • SCS

    -0.3800

    10.2

    -3.73%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0800

    8.15

    -0.98%

  • VOD

    -0.1500

    8.35

    -1.8%

  • RIO

    -0.1100

    54.56

    -0.2%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    22.17

    -0.54%

  • BTI

    -0.4300

    39.43

    -1.09%

  • NGG

    -3.0300

    62.9

    -4.82%

  • GSK

    -1.6900

    34.84

    -4.85%

  • RELX

    -2.6300

    45.53

    -5.78%

  • CMSD

    -0.3500

    22.48

    -1.56%

  • BCE

    -0.6300

    22.08

    -2.85%

  • BCC

    -3.5500

    91.89

    -3.86%

  • BP

    -1.2100

    27.17

    -4.45%

  • AZN

    -2.6700

    65.79

    -4.06%

  • JRI

    -0.7000

    11.26

    -6.22%

The race to save the Amazon's bushy-bearded monkeys
The race to save the Amazon's bushy-bearded monkeys / Photo: Pablo PORCIUNCULA - AFP

The race to save the Amazon's bushy-bearded monkeys

One morning in 2024, Armando Schlindwein found an orange-bearded monkey on the roof of his farmhouse on the edge of the Brazilian Amazon.

Text size:

Never before had he seen one of the striking creatures emerge from the forest.

The monkey, a Groves' Titi, listed as "critically endangered" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), had ventured far from its fast-shrinking home on a hill in a small patch of forest next to Schlindwein's house.

Deforestation was eating away at its limited domain, and the monkey was trying to find an escape route for its family.

The encounter inspired Schlindwein to launch a reforestation drive to open a corridor for the monkeys to swing tree-by-tree back into the rainforest.

"This little creature is endangered. We need to do something to preserve it," said Schlindwein, a 62-year-old small-scale farmer in Sinop municipality, located within Brazil's central Mato Grosso state.

With the help of NGOs like the Ecotono Institute and the Movement of People Affected by Dams (MAR), Schlindwein and his neighbors last year planted seeds of 47 native tree species on a deforested hectare (2.5 acres) of his land.

Within five to seven years, they hope the new growth will have tripled the available space for this particular monkey family, made up of four adults and an infant.

"Saving them is a daily task," said Schlindwein of his cheeky charges.

- 'Nowhere to go' -

Known locally as zogue-zogue and by scientists as Plecturocebus grovesi, the house cat-sized Groves' Titi is found only in Mato Grosso state, and there are just a few thousand of them left.

It was listed as one of the world's 25 most endangered primates in the 2022/3 "Primates in Peril" report of the IUCN and other environmental groups.

A 2019 study cited in the report said the zogue-zogue had lost 42 percent of its forest habitat, a figure that could reach 86 percent in a quarter-century if nothing is done to halt its destruction.

"When offspring are born and need to migrate to continue the reproductive cycle, they have nowhere to go," Gustavo Rodrigues Canale, a primatologist at the Federal University of Mato Grosso, told AFP.

"Human action leaves them trapped in small forest fragments," he said.

Schlindwein's family of monkeys is curtailed to a patch of land the size of a polo field, in a region with the ignominious title "Arc of deforestation" for having the highest rate of Amazon forest destruction.

Farmers clearing land for soybeans and other crops are chiefly blamed for the forest's fate.

The "Primates in Peril" report suggested forest loss could be mitigated by the creation of reserves "and the replacement of large areas of chemical-dependent monocultures of commodity crops by more sustainable models of land use, such as agroforests and agroecological food production."

- 'Monkeys cannot cross' -

Deforestation is not the only threat to Schlindwein's monkey family.

Locals say one side of the animals' territory has been cut off by flooding from a nearby hydroelectric plant run by a company partly owned by French energy giant EDF.

"Here, there used to be a stream with trees, but the Sinop Hydroelectric Plant (UHE)... created a large lagoon that the monkeys cannot cross," says Anthony Luiz, spokesman for MAR, next to a body of water about 300 meters (984 feet) across.

Environmentalists also accuse the company of leaving felled trees to rot in the river, killing the fish.

In the dry season, the rotting wood is exposed, feeding forest fires that hurt and displace monkeys and other animals.

Sinop Energia, which operates Sinop UHE, told AFP the plant meets "all legal and environmental requirements."

It added that it "maintains permanent monitoring of water quality, aquatic and terrestrial fauna, and vegetation regeneration in the area" and had also launched a monitoring program for threatened primates, as required by law.

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)