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This article is from The Star Online (http://thestar.com.my)

URL:

http://thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2005/1/25/features/9943904 & sec=f\

eatures

 

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Tuesday January 25, 2005

Tracking the docile tarsier

By Cecil Morella

 

Only the size of a human fist, the furry, tree-living tarsier is docile and

slow-moving, which makes it vulnerable to predation from both man and animals.

StarTwo looks at the efforts of a tarsier hunter-turned-conservationist in

saving the animal.

 

The tiny, furry tree-climber with the outsize, owl-like eyes pricked its ears

and swivelled its head as a rustle on the forest floor ended its midday slumber.

 

Carlito Pizarras, son of a taxidermist, had sneaked up so close he could smell

the tarsier on its shady perch.

 

 

 

The midget mammal has been around since the Eocene Age (55-34 millions years

ago), but that fact was hardly of any help against Bohol island’s most famous

game hunter.

 

Fortunately, Pizarras had given up his air gun, formaldehyde and the other

awful tools of his trade some time in the 1970s and devoted the rest of his life

to trying to save the exotic mascot of the Philippines’ receding tropical

forests.

 

“I began to notice that I had to hike deeper into the forest to find one,

unlike in the 1960s when you could snatch them (off) tree branches by the side

of the road,” the 50-year-old said at a tarsier reservation in Corella,

Philippines.

 

The tarsier is found only in four islands in the central and southern

Philippines and on several islands of nearby Indonesia. Incorrectly regarded by

Filipinos as the world’s smallest monkey, it is really a cousin of the lemur and

the tree shrew.

 

An adult male with grey or reddish fur grows to about 130g, about the size of a

human fist, and with its long, naked tail for balance it jumps like a frog

across low-hanging tree branches at night. It eats about a tenth of its weight

in moths, dragonflies, grasshoppers, and beetles. Left in the wild, tarsiers can

live up to 15 years.

 

Although technically it is not yet a part of the country’s endangered species

list, the government believes that without human intervention it could disappear

in a few years.

 

Hunting and trading in Tarsius syrichta, the species found in the Philippines,

was banned in the mid-1990s, when Pizarras flew to Manila with two orphaned

tarsier babies to meet Prince Charles, who was in the country, and enlisted the

heir to the British throne’s support to help save the species.

 

Scarce government funding, however, leaves the preservation effort primarily in

the hands of the private sector. The Philippine Tarsier Foundation Inc,

organised by local businessmen on Bohol, an island of 1.2 million people, runs

an 8.4ha forest reservation, a sort of Noah’s ark where Pizarras and two other

forest rangers live near about 100 tarsiers.

 

 

 

Besides the human hunters, feral cats banished from nearby communities are the

main predators, though some large birds are known to fancy them too. Pizarras

said the wardens had shot about 20 stray cats which tried to climb over the wire

mesh fence.

 

The reservation is nestled within a larger protected forest where about a

thousand other tarsiers are believed to live, temporarily reprieved with a

permanent logging ban. But the tarsiers pretty much have to fend for themselves

on the larger Mindanao, Samar and Leyte islands.

 

Pizarras started hunting tarsiers when he was 12. He became so adept at the

task that he hunted by scent. He says the animals gave off a musk through glands

located on their breasts, though most visitors at the reservation were clueless.

 

“We shot them out of the trees with air rifles,” Pizarras said. “My team easily

caught about 100 a month.” Stuffed tarsiers went for as little as 300 pesos

(RM20.80).

 

For those who preferred live pets, catching them alive was a relatively

straightforward undertaking.

 

Like June beetles, “We shook the trees until they fell.”

 

When tarsiers became scarce on Bohol, Pizarras began a captive breeding

programme so he could raise animals he would stuff. He sent 10 live tarsiers

bred this way to the Chicago Zoo in the United States in 1985.

 

In the wild, the territorial males attract four or five females who mate only

during the full moon after a week of courtship. Each gives birth to a single

young after a six-month pregnancy. The young tarsiers are pretty much on their

own after six months.

 

Raising tarsiers as pets is a cruel sport, said Pizarras, who insists the

stressed-out animals actually commit suicide or otherwise will themselves to die

inside their cages. “They would smash their head on the bars in a bid to escape

until they crack their skulls,” he said. He also insists the animal had the

capacity to simply stop breathing, a more debatable proposition.

 

At the reservation, researchers fitting temporary radio collars helped

establish the animals’ breeding and eating habits as well as their territorial

ranges.

 

With the environment department playing an oversight role, the tarsier

foundation has asked other Bohol towns with tarsier populations to donate 20ha

of forest land for conservation.

 

“We plan to expand the programme to Mindanao, Leyte and Samar,” Pizarras said.

– AFP<p>

 

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