CERCOPAN saves rare drill monkey!
Category: CERCOPAN staff fighting to save rainforest and endanger, Cercopan, Communities, Conservation, Education, Environmental education saving endangered primates, Monkeys, Nigeria, Orphaned baby monkeys, Saving endangered monkeys | Date: Oct 05 2009 | By: cercopan
Usually a trip to Agoi is an anticipated event, often for an exciting occasion when the local community are even more cheerful than usual and their specially brewed, extra ‘hot’ spirit is more readily available. This trip however, was quite different from those usually encountered.
We had received information that a drill monkey was being kept as a pet within the village. Our first response was to inform Pandrillus, another primate organisation based in Calabar who specialise in drill monkey and chimpanzee rehabilitation. Due to their current schedule and as Agoi is so close to our forest site, they asked us if we could go and remove the animal from the situation. CERCOPAN will never buy an animal, as it encourages people to try to catch them for financial gain, and we try to avoid getting the police involved as it deters people getting in touch to donate animals already in their possession. In these cases we try to negotiate with the owners and hope to persuade them to give up their animal, making them understand why it’s better for the individual and for them.
Rescued Juvenile Drill monkey
When we first sent our CERCOPAN representative to see the owner we found it very hard to get our message across. The owner, did not want to give up the animal. He said he had paid 4000 naira for the monkey, now a juvenile male named Chris, from a hunter back in January of this year. He had been caring for it since then and it had been living in a small wooden box constructed from wooden planks at the side of his house. The box only had some small holes to see out of and soon he would grow far too big for the box, as adult male drills grow to a huge size.
Adult male Drill Monkey
When our first approach was not working, we attempted to negotiate with someone who had the power to sway the owner’s opinion; the local chief of the village. The chiefs of a village often have the final say in many decisions and solve many disputes involving village residents. After consulting the chief he spoke to the owner and began to change the owner’s position on the situation. To begin with the owner still wanted a reward in the form of guaranteed employment. Again we had to explain that if we agreed to such terms we would continually have this problem in future situations, and inadvertently increase the number of primates removed from the forest when others decided to use them as a means of getting a job.
Eventually he understood our position and we reached an agreement whereby he would receive a certificate stating that he had donated the drill monkey to us. We left to prepare a certificate and returned, again to a big discussion about the situation. Luckily we still managed to make him see he was doing the best thing and Chris was handed over in front of a crowd of around 50 people. In addition to his certificate we presented him with information leaflets about why it is wrong to hunt monkeys and a poster urging people to protect the highly endangered drill monkey.
To make the entire event official, various traditions had to be adhered to. After the exchange of monkey and certificate, further exchanges had to be made involving kai-kai; the locally brewed spirit that happens to be particularly strong in Agoi. This isn’t the kind of exchange where each party buys a bottle and the other takes it home to drink leisurely in their own time - this is when both parties buy a bottle and both bottles must be finished by the end of the gathering. A little speech was made by both sides and then each departed, swaying slightly from side-to-side!
Chris was brought to our Calabar site late the next evening where he remained in our quarantine area overnight and where he had more space than he had been used to before. He seemed to enjoy it so much that, by the next day, he was so eager to run around more he managed to escape our trained staff and cause havoc around the office. After destroying several office items, chewing keys off computer keyboards and peeing on important papers, we finally managed to calm him down and return him to a travel box. After that he was taken to Pandrillus and reunited with those of his kind. Now he is busy making new friends and learning what it is really like to be a drill monkey!
Tags: African Wildlife, Cercopan, Community Conservation, Drill monkey, Endangered primates, Nigeria, rehabilitation

My name is Claire Coulson, I am the Director of CERCOPAN and have worked for the organisation since January 2007. I spend my time between Calabar HQ and Rhoko our bush site.


2 Responses to “CERCOPAN saves rare drill monkey!”
Christine C., on 05 Oct 2009
Great post Clare and another happy ending…and perhaps the villagers are now much more congnizant of the poaching problem and why it is wrong to have these animals as pets. And wow, those babies sure do get big…I imagine an adult male drill monkey is also very powerful??
Itay, on 06 Oct 2009
That’s wonderful news and sure better than living in a box. No animal should live in a box moreover monkeys. It is so importent to let the locals understand the damage they cause to nature and that they won’t get any benifit from it. Do you plan to transfer him later to Pandrillus?
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