By Andy Kerr
Column #33 - Go to next
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Length: 750 words
Published: 23 October 1997, Wallowa County
Chieftain
When my parents first took me to the Portland
(now Washington Park) Zoo, I tarried most at the
monkey and gorilla exhibits (really just cages
without bars).
They could kind of walk like humans (though
their knuckles tended to drag), and could grasp
tools like humans. They seemed to be able to
communicate with sounds and gestures. They
appeared to be engaged in playful activities.
Books later told me that primates express a
variety of same emotions human do, including
surprise, happiness, sadness, grief, anger and
depression.
Given our common evolutionary heritage, do
humans have a special affinity for our fellow
primates?
If so, do we also have a special obligation?
Should we be especially concerned about the fate
of our fellow primate species such macaques,
baboons, guenons, capuchins, marmosets, tamarins,
lemurs, lorises, and tarsiers, gorillas,
chimpanzees and orangutans?
Primates are not only smarter than your
average mammal, but share much in common with
humans. 98% of the chimpanzee's DNA is the same
as a human's DNA. That's our closest evolutionary
relative and the chimp is among the most
threatened of all primates.
233 species of primates have been classified
so far (a species previously unknown to science
was recently discovered in Brazil). According to
John Tuxill of the Worldwatch Institute, about
one-half of the primate species fact extinction,
while another 20% are approaching this ultimate
and final status.
The reasons are loss of the forest habitat in
which they live, overhunting and illegal trade,
says Tuxill.
Only one species of primate is increasing in
number: humans.
Chimps, gibbons, gorillas and orangutans are
"being trapped for the pet trade" notes
Tuxill. Monkeys are taking an awful hit because
the poachers must also kill mothers to get at the
prized babies.
Hot spot of forest destruction affecting high
concentrations of primates includes southeastern
Brazil, Madagascar, equatorial Africa and
Southeast Asia.
Efforts are being made to stop forest
destruction, and to stop the poaching, but more
must be done.
Some good (at least for some kinds of
primates) news exists. While the Hutus and the
Tutsis slaughter hundreds of thousands of each
other in equatorial Africa, both sides deeply
value the gorilla. During the recent troubles in
Rwanda, only two gorilla deaths were due to
warfare by the highest of the primates, and both
were accidental.
We seem to have a special bond with the animal
species with the most intelligence and they need
not be primates. Consider Keiko, star of the Free
Willy films and presently a resident of the
Oregon Coast Aquarium in Newport. The whale was
first captured in the North Atlantic Ocean.
It took much cooperation to rescue Keiko from
the Mexico City aquarium in which he could hardly
turn around and where the water was an unhealthy
warm for the warm-blooded mammal.
Keiko's new home is much more spacious, the
water is better along with the food. It has been
good the whale who has gained weight, exercises
more, and seems happier. It's still however a
prison. Willy is not free.
The cooperation has ended. The Keiko Free
Willy Foundation wants to return the whale to the
wild. The Oregon Coast Aquarium does not. They
are now engaged in a major urinating match on the
front pages of The Oregonian. The foundation
wants to move the captive cetacean to a new
halfway house on the edge of the North Atlantic
in anticipation of eventual release to the wild
from whence Keiko came.
The aquarium demurs, saying Keiko isn't
readyand may never befor re-release
in the wild. Their objectivity is naturally
suspect in that Keiko has been a tremendous cash
cow for the aquarium, which probably owes its
survival to the market value of the popular
whale.
Keiko should have never been captured in the
first place. Whales belong in oceans, not zoos.
They shouldn't have to do hourly shows to crowds
of pasty tourists sitting in bleachers gulping
popcorn and soda while getting canned
play-by-play commentary over the loudspeaker.
People who want to see whale to travel to the
wild to meet them where they naturally reside.
Keiko was captured as a youth and may have
lost the ability to survive in the wild. But
maybe he hasn't. For Keiko's sake, if not the
aquarium, it's worth taking the next step. It's
time to move the whale to a halfway house closer
to the place of capture. Only by doing so, can it
be determined if Willy can be freed.
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