Primate Tourism Monkeys Around with Life and Death

A young Tibetan Macaque. These monkeys get caught up in adult fights when efforts related to tourism restrict their range. The primate infant mortality rate jumped from about 15 percent prior to 1992, to nearly 55 percent after the monkeys became tourist attractions.
(Image credit: Carol Berman)

Primate tourism may be fun for the visitors, but it’s no party for the monkeys.

A 19-year study of Tibetan Macaques in a scenic area in eastern China reveals that these "monkeys on display" became very aggressive towards each other and put their young at a heightened risk of death from accidental injury. This is most likely in response to the increase in human contact, reduction in habitat size and worry over food rations, according to new anthropological research.

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