Monkey in the Middle
Blamed for destroying one of North Africa's most important forests, Morocco's Barbary macaques struggle to survive
- By John F. Ross
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2004, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Today’s field biologists not only have to study animals, but also delve into seemingly intractable social, economic and land issues. At a conference in Ifrane this past June, Camperio Ciani presented a forest restoration plan that involves raising the Berber’s standard of living, making residents more aware of deforestation, supporting eco-tourism and restricting absentee investments in sheep. Without these steps, the Moroccan eco-drama will have only one conclusion, he says: things will get far worse for macaques and humans alike “if the root causes of the environmental deterioration aren’t addressed.”
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Comments (1)
No drama without a protagonist and a perfect scenery “ atlas mountains”, ignorance more than anything else overfills any given thick Russian novel.
As for making a comment regarding the interesting article as far as I 'm concerned, it‘s one of the species that I have observed to complete my book mammals of Algeria www.wildalgeria.com
It’s only logical the nature’s interconnectedness as the basic itself of what makes the ecology a scholar field “the equilibrium of life and by the gastric need to feed itself. But there is a break off in every cycle and rhythm in a certain time and it’s more than human’s escape from not bearing for long an ignorance, the role of a scapegoat finds it useful way .
The vital forests through north Africa, the capital and chief siege of Macaca sylvanus home land is already scarce and barely fits, as habitat, what may insure to mid size primates a long existing span as species in our regions.
Indeed, found only in Morocco and Algeria(half maybe of the Moroccan population) and introduced in Gibraltar. Is surely the only African macaques for the 12 others are all Asiatic, an Asiatic Papio(baboon) eco-form.
“The animals are known to strip bark from cedar trees to get at the moist, nutrient-;” but again it will find its way to survive as long as formulas in viability in life are assimilated tricks for a monkey. A reminder of the vanishing natural predators, mainly panthers, is a “stab in the rib”, but again it’s more complicated in maintaining a regular and well balanced population within the disposition of natural habitat can afford as nutrition. Primates, mainly evolved ones such Macaque, have found in adaptation forms away to stray from the simple rule of hunter and hunted as the main nucleus regulation of a population.
The high risk of extinction is in a way what served them to survive for a long time, their keenness in taking advantages over proximities in anthropocentrical sites .
Bouzid Rachid
Posted by Bouzid Rachid kamel on March 9,2010 | 04:25 AM