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Current project details and status


Slow lorises, such as this Bengal Slow Loris (Nycticebus bengalensis) were once considered common, but are now recognized as threatened species.

The conservation of slow lorises is a challenge that deals with the threats of deforestation and the wildlife trade, including the exotic pet trade, traditional medicine, and bushmeat. Because of these and other threats, such as habitat fragmentation, selective logging, and slash and burn agriculture, slow lorises (genus Nycticebus) are list as either "Vulnerable" or "Endangered" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Because of the frequency in which these primates were found in animal markets and imprecise population surveys, their conservation status was originally listed as "Least Concern." Their rapidly declining populations and local extinctions, their status was updated and CITES elevated them to Appendix I, which prohibits international commercial trade in 2007. Local laws also protect slow loris from hunting and trade, however, enforcement is lacking in most areas.

Slow lorises have been a part of the traditional beliefs of Southeast Asia for at least several hundred years. Their remains are buried under houses and roads to bring good luck, and every part of their body is used for traditional medicine to make everything from love potions to unproven cures for cancer, leprosy, epilepsy, and sexually transmitted diseases. The primary users of this traditional medicine or urban, middle-aged women who are reluctant to consider alternatives. Despite the beliefs about their use in medicine, a large number of slow lorises are traded as pets, both locally and internationally. Although it is illegal to import slow lorises for commercial sale, they are popular pets in Japan, the United States, and Europe, largely due to their "cute" appearance, which has been popularized in highly-viewed YouTube videos. Hundreds of slow lorises have been confiscated at airports, but because they are easy to hide, these numbers are likely to be only a small fraction of the total number being trafficked. Traders cut or pull the teeth of slow lorises to make them appear to be an appropriate pet for small children, but this practice often leads to extreme blood loss, infection, and death. Slow lorises lacking their teeth cannot be released into the wild. Captive lorises also experience improper care and die from poor nutrition, stress, or infection. Despite this, demand has risen, and slow lorises are no longer taken opportunistically, but are now hunted on a commercial scale using flashlights, from which the animals do not flee.

Connected protected areas are important for the conservation of slow lorises because these primates are not suited for traveling long distances on the ground. Training for enforcement officials is important to improve identification and the awareness of their legal protection. Sanctuaries and rescue facilities are available to provide both temporary and lifelong care for confiscated slow lorises. Zoo populations of some species have not bred much recently and are growing too old to reproduce, although the Pygmy slow loris is doing well at some facilities, such as the San Diego Zoo.

Threats in wild

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Deforestation is a threat to slow lorises throughout their range. By 2001, Southeast Asia had lost much of its forest cover (left). Likewise, the pace of deforestation on Indonesian islands, like Borneo (right), has accelerated.

Slow lorises are threatened by deforestation and the wildlife trade, which includes the exotic pet trade, traditional medicine, and bushmeat.[1][2] Other threats includes road construction, selective logging, and slash and burn agriculture.[3] Habitat fragmentation obstructs biological dispersal for these species that rely on vines and lianas to move from tree to tree.[4] Consequently, slow lorises are found dead on power lines or the victims of roadkill in areas where roads cut between forest patches.[5]

All species are listed either as "Vulnerable" or "Endangered" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).[4][6][7][8][9] Populations are rapidly declining, and their distribution is becoming patchy due to local extinctions throughout their range.[3] Although all species are protected by law in every country in which they occur,[10] conservation efforts are hindered by a lack of public awareness, since many local villagers and remoter buyers of captive specimens are unaware of their endangered status.[1][11] Recognition and awareness of slow lorises is even low among national park staff.[3] In places like Vietnam, where these nocturnal primates have commonly been found, most local villagers were not familiar with them when shown photos. Only a few older hunters recognized them, but pointed out that they hadn't seen them in more than 10 or 15 years.[1]

Traditionally, the slow loris genus, Nycticebus, was thought to consist of very few species and was considered to be common across Southeast Asia and Indonesia. These assumptions were due to their nocturnal behavior[12] and their high frequency of occurrence in animal markets throughout the region.[13] Furthermore, research from the 20th century and earlier perpetuated the notion that slow lorises were common by reporting them as either present or absent rather than noting low population densities in their field research.[14] As a result, slow lorises were seldom studied, resulting in the initial "Least Concern" conservation status assessments on the IUCN Red List.[12] Even by the mid-2000s, population estimates were based only on small surveys.[15]

Other threats to slow lorises include selective logging, such as that in the Koh Kong Province of Cambodia (left), and increased agriculture, such as this upland rice field on a steep slope in southern Yunnan Province in China (right).

In 2009, primatologist James Thorn used environmental niche modelling in Indonesia to supplement the poor population data gathered to date to predict the remaining available habitat for lorises on the islands of Sumatra, Java, and Borneo.[16] These estimates indicated that the Javan Slow Loris (N. javanicus) was the most threatened by habitat loss, followed by the slow lorises from Sumatra, the Sunda Slow Loris (N. coucang). The Bornean Slow Loris (N. menagensis) was in a better situation since it had a high percentage of low risk areas available within its range.[16][5]

Although habitat loss has been significant throughout the range of the slow lorises, their decline is most closely associated with the unsustainable trade in the species, either for exotic pets or for traditional medicine.[17] Slow lorises are abundant at the markets[18] and are one of the most common primates sold.[13] Slow lorises are easy to catch because they don't leap from tree to tree, often freezing and covering their face when spotted. (For this reason, Indonesians call them malu malu or "shy one".[19]) They are hunted not only by expert hunters,[18] but are so easy to catch that they are also caught opportunistically due to the easy financial reward they bring at the markets.[18][20]

Traditions and beliefs affecting conservation

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Traditional beliefs and uses for slow lorises vary, and many practices appear to have deep roots going back at least 300 years. Oral traditions suggest these practices go back even further.[21] In the late 1800s and early 1900s, it was reported that the people from the interior of the island of Borneo believed that slow lorises were the gatekeepers for the heavens and that each person had their own personal slow loris waiting for them in the afterlife. More often, however, slow lorises are used in traditional medicine or to ward off evil.[20]

In the Mondulkiri Province of Cambodia, hunters believe that lorises can heal their own broken bones immediately after falling from a branch in order to climb back up the tree, and that slow lorises have medicinal powers because they require more than one hit with a stick to die. The hunters also believe that seeing a slow loris will bring bad luck on a hunting trip.[20] In the province of North Sumatra, the slow loris is thought to bring good luck if it is buried under the foundation of a house.[20] Similarly, villagers concerned about traffic safety might bury a slow loris under a road to prevent accidents.[22] In Java, it is thought that putting a piece of its skull in a water jug would make a husband more docile and submissive, just like a slow loris in the daytime. Alternatively, it's body parts were used to place curses on enemies in North Sumatra. More recently, researchers have documented the belief that the consumption of loris meat was an aphrodisiac that improves "male power."[20] The gall bladder of the Bengal Slow Loris (Nycticebus bengalensis) has historically been used to make ink for tatoos by the village elders in Pursat-Koh Kong Provinces.[20]

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The trade in slow lorises, whether as pets or for medicine is illegal because every nation in which they occur naturally has laws protecting them.[10] Cambodia lists them as protected, noting penalties of one month in prison and fines of US$2.50 to US$250 in 2010 for anyone who catches, hunts, poisons, or transports them.[20] In Indonesia, the slow loris trade has been illegal since 1973, when the Agriculture Ministry passed Decree No. 66. This law was clarified in 1999 with Government Regulation No. 7 ("Protection of Wild Flora and Fauna") and Act No. 5 ("Biodiversity Conservation").[23][24] Violations are subject to five years in prison and a fine of 100-million rupiah (~US$10,000).[25][24]

The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) first listed the two known species of slow loris under Appendix II on 7 January 1975. All newly identified species were covered by Appendix II on 2 April 1977[26] when all primates were given either Appendix I or Appendix II protection.[27] Appendix II only requires a export permit for international trade, as long as trade will not negatively impact the survival of wild populations.[28] Most of the trade in slow lorises, however, is illegal and usually involves smuggling to Japan,[2][24] The lack of legal trade reported to the CITES Secretariat is shown in the CITES trade database, where minimal trade by CITES Parties has been reported up until 2007.[29] Regardless, slow lorises remained vulnerable to international trade under Appendix II,[2][11] and the rampant Southeast Asian pet trade was another reason for concern.[30] As a result, Cambodia proposed that slow lorises be elevated to Appendix I,[2] which prohibits species from being traded internationally for commercial purposes and requires both import and export permits for certain types of non-commercial trade, such as scientific research.[28] The proposal covered all three species recognized at the time—the Sunda slow loris, Bengal slow loris, and pygmy slow loris—because they have traditionally been managed as collectively due to a lack of knowledge on how to distinguish them.[30]

Leading up CITES conference at which a vote would be taken on the proposal, support for the proposed change in status appeared to be limited due to the limited amount of reported, legal trade.[2] In April 2007, the non-profit conservation group ProFauna Indonesia attracted news coverage with a demonstration held in Malang, Java. The demonstration was an appeal for increased protection for slow lorises and involved organization members suspending themselves from bridges while holding banners that ready "Stop jual kukang" ("Stop the slow loris trade") and "Jangan beli kukang" ("Don't buy slow lorises").[24] From early- to mid-June, the 14th CITES Conference of the Parties (CITES COP-14) was hosted at The Hague, Netherlands.[14][24] On 8 June, Cambodia presented the proposal along with their rationale.[24] Indonesia followed by announcing their support,[23] along with Japan, India, Laos, Thailand, the United States, the European Union, Qatar, and many non-governmental organizations (NGOs). Although the proposal was adopted by consensus,[24] some conservation groups objected on the grounds that rational analysis was being usurped by sentiment.[15]

Despite the added protection of CITES Appendix I status, wild slow lorises still receive poor protection because enforcement of the international trade ban is difficult and the penalties are minor.[1][23] Slow lorises are still found in large numbers at animal markets, most notably in Cambodia and Indonesia, but the traders show no concern for being caught.[10] During a study by Nekaris et al in 2010, vendors in Medan, Jakarta, and Surabaya spoke freely to researchers about how they obtain slow lorises, their uses in medicine, prices, and sales numbers. The markets were not concealed, but were open daily in a designated area in town.[25] Even law enforcement is involved in the trade, with park rangers and police admitting to the purchase of slow lorises for medicinal purposes. Even the wife of another law enforcement official is one of the most notable sellers of slow loris parts in the Mondulkiri Province in Cambodia.[20]

Wildlife trade

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Slow lorises are often sold in animal markets in Southeast Asia either as pets or for use in traditional medicine.

Humans have been hunting mammals in Asia for at least 40,000 years,[13] and until recently, the levels of extraction have been low enough to be sustainable.[17] Hunting pressure since the 1960s has become increasingly unsustainable due to a number of factors. Growing demand, decreased supply, and the subsequent increased value of the marketed wildlife has led to overexploitation. The drive to capture and wildlife, and particularly slow lorises, is increasingly dominated by demands from wealthy urban areas, replacing the subsistence hunting traditionally performed in poor rural areas.[13] In the case of long-lived primates, such as the slow lorises, populations replenish themselves slowly.[17] Slow lorises are particularly vulnerable because they tend to freeze when spotted.[10][31] Lastly, increased access to new technologies, such as improved transport, guns, wire snares, and spotlights, have facilitated hunting and pushed extraction levels beyond the point of sustainability.[17][31] These new factors threaten slow loris survival.[10]

Opportunistic hunting of lorises has been a traditional practice, for example, when a tree in which the primate is living is cut down.[31][20] When forests are cleared to to create oil palm (Elaeis guineensis) plantations or for housing, the lorises are collected from the trees and then sold to the "loris man," who in turn sells them in the cities. Timber merchants in Kalimantan and Aceh also sell slow lorises to traders, and since the primates cling to branches instead of fleeing, they are often transported hundreds of miles on the original tree branches to which they clung.[25]

Demand from middlemen and specialized animal trade mafias[20][11] has increased profitability of slow loris hunting and driven many hunters to catch any they spot by climbing or shaking trees.[10][20][25] Bright flashlights make spotting slow lorises much easier at night because of their eye shine.[31] In the Mondulkiri Province in Cambodia, slow lorises shaken out of trees and are then killed by beating them with a stick.[20] In Indonesia, slow lorises are worth more alive, so hunters climb the tree to reach them and place a V-shaped stick around their neck to immobilize them.[25]

Middlemen buy as many as 30 slow lorises from hunters over a wide area, and then sell them in the major city markets for 300,000 to 500,000 rupiahs (US$32 to US$54) each. Western tourists and expatriates pay as much as 1,000,000 rupiahs (US$108).[11] Traders have reported to researchers that they have difficulty keeping pace with demand, and one trader claimed to have sold nearly 1,200 pygmy slow lorises during 2001–2002.[20] Hundreds of slow lorises are sold domestically each year in Indonesian at open-air animal markets (or "bird markets"), as well as in shopping malls.[11][24] Slow lorises are the most commonly sold protected primate at these markets.[5] Live trade is the most common, with only 13.6% of slow lorises traded for parts.[32] In Phnom Penh, Cambodia during the 1990s, 204 slow lorises were being sold at a single store; in 2007 a market in Mondulkiri Province displayed 30 dried specimens. A total of 234 slow lorises were confiscated by the Forestry Administration-Wildlife Alliance between 2002 and 2006. [20] In Indonesia, nearly 6,000 to 7,000 slow lorises were traded domestically each year from 2000 to 2006.[24] For international trade, Laos, Cambodia, and Thailand were the biggest exporters,[33] with exports having declined for all species except the pygmy slow loris form 1998–2007 (compared to 1978–1997).[32]

Traditional medicine

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Slow lorises are commonly dried and sold (top), and then later prepared for specific uses, such as loris ointment (bottom).

Slow lorises are commonly used in traditional medicine across their geographic range, a trend that has been reported since at least 1900.[13] Thousands of slow lorises are captured each year for such use.[10] Many human factors drive the trade in slow loris parts, including social customs, economic factors, and traditional belief systems.[17]

In Cambodia, the deeply-rooted tradition of using the Bengal Slow Loris and Pygmy Slow Loris (Nycticebus pygmaeus) in traditional medicine is widespread,[33] with the Pygmy Slow Loris being the most commonly request animal in traditional medicine shops in Cambodia's capital, Phnom Penh.[13] Some people in the country believe dried slow loris can cure cancer.[34] Slow lorises are also smoked for other traditional remedies.[15] Traditional Khmer medicine practitioners in that region claim that medicines made from slow lorises can cure 100 diseases,[20] with some practitioners from the National Centre for Traditional Medicine reporting that slow loris are sometimes roasted alive under the assumption that this increases the medicine's potency.[35] Slow lorises are also burned alive, causing their eyes to burst and release a liquid called minyak kukang (or loris oil), which is used in black magic and traditional medicine and is supposed to have life-giving qualities and act as a love potion.[22][36]

In the case of the Bengal slow loris, every part—including the brain, urine, and skin—is used in traditional medicine in order to heal wounds and rheumatism. In the case of the Sunda slow loris, people trade the skin, feet, skeletons, and skulls. The fur is reported to heal wounds, the flesh cures epilepsy, eyes are used in love potions, and the meat is reported to cure asthma and stomach problems. The pygmy slow loris is primarily valued for the medicinal use of its hair, but it is also used to make bone glue of monkey, a medicine used mostly by local people, but sometimes sold to visitors.[3] In general, wearing slow loris bones is considered good luck and the meat is sometimes thought to cure leprosy.[37]

The main buyers of medicine made from slow lorises are middle- to upper-class women between the ages of 25 and 45 who primarily use loris rice wine tonic after childbirth to alleviate the pain of childbirth.[20][13][15] One bottle of wine is made by mixing rice wine with the carcasses of three dead animals.[15] Minority groups in Khmer also use loris-based medicine for healing broken bones, asthma, and sexually transmitted diseases.[20] A survey by primatologist Anna Nekaris et al. (2010) showed that these belief systems were so strong that the majority of respondents expressing reluctance to consider alternatives to loris-based medicines.[13]

In 1993, 200 dead slow lorises were found cut open and stretched out on sticks in the markets of Phnom Penh. In another shop, 150 dead slow lorises were found in two boxes. This suggests hunting on a commercial scale, which has had dramatic effects on local populations. At the time, these dried slow lorises were sold for US$4.25.[34] However, the prices doubled between 1997 and 2007[13] and continue to rise. Most vendors (80%) surveyed in 2010 attributed the price increases to a decline in loris numbers and increased enforcement.[38]

Pet trade

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Slow lorises are sold locally at street markets, but are also sold internationally over the Internet and in pet stores.[37][29] They are especially popular or trendy in Japan, particularly among Japanese women.[29][15] The reasons for their popularity, according to the Japan Wildlife Conservation Society (JWCS), are that "they're easy to keep, they don't cry, they're small, and just very cute."[15] Because of their "cuteness," videos of pet slow lorises are some of the mostly frequently watched animal videos on YouTube.[22] Along with the common squirrel monkey (Saimiri sciureus), slow lorises are the most popular primate pets in Japan.[29] Pet shops frequently advertise them,[15] even on their websites,[3] with prices ranging between US$1,500 and more than US$5,000,[29][15] or ¥450,000.[3] Despite these frequent advertisements, the World Conservation Monitoring Centre (WCMC) reported only a few dozen slow lorises were imported in 2006, suggesting frequent smuggling.[3] Slow lorises are also smuggled to China, Taiwan, Europe, the United States, and Saudi Arabia for use as pets.[37][15]

 
Slow lorises that are kept as pets have their front teeth cut or pulled before being sold, which often results in infection and death.

Even within their countries of origin, slow lorises are very popular pets.[25] Indonesian species are mostly sold as pets, despite myths about their magical and curative properties.[33] They are seen as a "living toy" for children by local people or are bought out of pity by Western tourists or expatriates. Neither local nor foreign buyers usually know anything about these primates, their endangered status, or that the trade is illegal.[11] During the late 2000s, Sunda slow lorises were regularly sold throughout the Medan bird market in North Sumatra. According to 59 monthly surveys and interviews with local traders, nearly a thousand locally sourced slow lorises exchanged hands in the market. During the surveys, between 15 and 45 slow lorises were seen around the market.[25]

International trade usually results in a high mortality rate during transit, between 30% and 90%. Slow lorises also experience many health problems as a result of both local and international trade.[15] In order to give the impression that the primates are tame and appropriate pets for children,[36] to protect people from their potentially toxic bite,[10] or to deceive buyers into thinking the animal is a baby,[15] animal dealers either pull the front teeth with pliers or wire cutters or they cut them off with nail cutters.[11][25][22] This results in severe bleeding, which sometimes causes shock or death,[22] and frequently leads to dental infection, which can be fatal in 90% of all cases.[11][36] Without their teeth, these animals are no longer able to fend for themselves in the wild, and must remain in captivity for life.[11][36] The slow lorises found in animal markets are usually underweight, malnourished, and have had their fur dyed, which complicates species identification at rescue centers.[37] As high as 95% of the slow lorises rescued from the markets die of dental infection or improper care.[36]

As part of the trade, infants are pulled prematurely from their parents, leaving them unable to remove their own urine, feces, and oily skin secretions from their fur. Slow lorises have a special network of blood vessels in their hands and feet, which makes them vulnerable to cuts when pulled from the wire cages they are kept in.[15] Slow lorises are also very stress-sensitive and do not do well in captivity. Infection, stress, pneumonia, and poor nutrition lead to high death rates among pet lorises.[11] Pet owners also fail to provide proper care because they are usually sleeping when the nocturnal pet is awake.[36]

International trade and smuggling

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Slow lorises are smuggled to countries like Japan and the United States, where they have become popular exotic pets, largely due to their "cute" appearance, which has been popularized on YouTube.

Both high demand and resulting high prices have fueled increased smuggling of slow lorises to Japan. Although pet shop employees declare that their slow lorises are captive-bred, the advertisements on the pet store websites indicate that their stocks come from Java, Sumatra, or China. New arrivals to the stores are also of variable in size and age, which has further led the JWCS to suspect the slow lorises are imported illegally. Official, legal trade of slow lorises prior to CITES Appendix I coverage (from 1998 to 2006) was limited to just ten Sunda slow lorises from Malaysia and Myanmar.[29] A review of 24 surveys covering wildlife trade between 1990 and 2006 demonstrated 228 slow lorises were known to have been traded unofficially each year and had come from Cambodia, Indonesia, Vietnam, and Laos. The major trade hubs were Jakarta, Medan, Singapore and Bangkok.[37] Numerous illegal trade routes for each species were also documented prior to the 2007 CITES vote over Appendix I coverage in the Notification to Parties publication.[3]

A report in 2010 by Nekaris et al. reported that Laos, Cambodia, and Thailand were the primary exporters of slow lorises, with Singapore and Malaysia also involved. China and Indonesia was also known for international trade, although their local trade was more significant. Slow loris parts were typically exported from Thailand and Cambodia, but Malaysia and Singapore primarily exported live animals. The most noteworthy importer was Japan, followed by the United States and then the European Union. More than half of 400 illegal imports were live animals (238), while the rest were either body parts (122) or unspecified (40).[39]

In Japan alone, 39 confiscations including 363 live animals were made between 1998 and 2006, with 2006 being the peak year.[29] During the same time period, officials in Thailand, Indonesian, and Singaporean officials discovered 358  destined for Japan.[15] Details of several confiscations from smuggling attempts between Thailand and Japan have been reported by the International Primate Protection League (IPPL),[2] including one event on 2 May 2007, where 40 slow lorises were confiscated at Narita Airport only a month before the CITES conference that elevated the slow loris status to Appendix I. Twelve of those animals died.[24] The deaths are not unusual, with a mortality rate of 76% for all species of confiscated slow lorises,[29] many dying before they are transferred to zoos. The JWCS suspects that the high mortality rate among smuggling slow lorises causes traders smuggle more slow lorises than are needed to supply the market.[29]

In Japan, enforcement is not considered very strict since only 23% of offenders (9 out of 39 cases) were officially charged between 1998 and 2006. Instead, most only received fines. Based on reports taken from Kyodo News, the JWCS concluded that the primary concern of Customs officials was the prevention of infectious diseases, such as Ebola. Slow lorises are sometimes mixed in with other trade-restricted species, such as reptiles,[29] and since confiscations target high profiles species, it is likely that the international smuggling numbers are "just the tip of the iceberg."[25] Making detection even more difficult, slow lorises can easily be hidden in suitcases since they tend to instinctively curl up and remain quiet when startled.[15]

Conservation efforts

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Most slow lorises rescued from animal markets die quickly due to infection, stress, or from previous neglect.

The outlook for the Bengal slow loris is more optimistic than for other species since it can be found in more low-risk areas. However, the Javan and Sunda slow lorises are threatened by increasing land use by people. Surveys are needed determine existing population densities and habitat viability. Connectivity between protected areas are important for slow lorises because they are not adapted to dispersing across the ground over large distances. For successful reintroductions, connectivity between sites with low population density are considered ideal. Protected area extensions are also needed in Borneo, Java, and Sumatra.[5]

Despite being included in CITES Appendix I protection and covered by local conservation laws, slow lorises are still threatened by both local and international trade due to problems with enforcement.[23][20] The illegal wildlife trade has seriously jeopardized a US$310 million investment program by the World Bank for East and Southeast Asia biodiversity.[35] In 2008, training workshops for enforcement officials and rescue center personnel were held in Singapore to help teach slow loris identification, conservation status, and husbandry. Surveys prior to the training showed 87% of the trainees could not identify slow loris species, but the one-day workshops had a significant impact.[37]

Rehabilitation is available to some confiscated slow lorises. Organizations such as the International Animal Rescue (IAR) run sanctuaries that offer lifelong care to slow lorises that have had their teeth removed, while also providing education and awareness programs to help end domestic trade. By collaborating with authorities, healthy slow lorises are released back into the wild.[11] However, identification is critical because authorities still manage all slow loris species as one species, resulting in species being released into the wrong locations and increasing confusion in taxonomy and conservation.[40][30]

Populations of slow lorises species, such as the Bengal and Sunda slow loris, are not fairing well in zoos. Of the 29 captive specimens in North American zoos in 2008, several are hybrids that cannot breed while most are past their reproductive years. The last captive birth for these species in North America was in 2001 in San Diego. Pygmy slow lorises are doing better in North American zoos. The population has grown to 74 animals between the time they were imported in the late 1980s and 2008, with most of them born at the San Diego Zoo.[1]

The San Diego Zoo has also written husbandry manuals for slow lorises, promoted public awareness, conducted field surveys, and support slow loris rescue facilities. The Vietnamese postal service recognized slow lorises on a postage stamp by using a picture of a Bengal slow loris and her infant published by the San Diego Zoo in February 1999.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Fitch-Snyder & Livingstone 2008.
  2. ^ a b c d e f McGreal 2007a.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Management Authority of Cambodia (3–15 June 2007). Notification to Parties: Consideration of Proposals for Amendment of Appendices I and II. Netherlands: CITES. p. 31. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 January 2011. Retrieved 9 January 2011.{{cite conference}}: CS1 maint: date format (link)
  4. ^ a b IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2010.4. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Missing or empty |title= (help); Unknown parameter |assessment_year= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |assessors= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |taxon= ignored (help) {{cite iucn}}: error: no identifier (help)
  5. ^ a b c d Thorn, Nijman & Smith 2009, p. 295.
  6. ^ IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2010.4. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Missing or empty |title= (help); Unknown parameter |assessment_year= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |assessors= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |taxon= ignored (help) {{cite iucn}}: error: no identifier (help)
  7. ^ IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2010.4. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Missing or empty |title= (help); Unknown parameter |assessment_year= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |assessors= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |taxon= ignored (help) {{cite iucn}}: error: no identifier (help)
  8. ^ IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2010.4. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Missing or empty |title= (help); Unknown parameter |assessment_year= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |assessors= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |taxon= ignored (help) {{cite iucn}}: error: no identifier (help)
  9. ^ IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2010.4. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Missing or empty |title= (help); Unknown parameter |assessment_year= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |assessors= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |taxon= ignored (help) {{cite iucn}}: error: no identifier (help)
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Braun, D. (2010). "Love potions threaten survival of lorises". National Geographic. Archived from the original on 9 January 2011. Retrieved 9 January 2011.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Sanchez 2008, p. 10.
  12. ^ a b Nekaris & Munds 2010, p. 383.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i Starr et al. 2010, p. 17.
  14. ^ a b Nekaris & Nijman 2007.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Black, R. (8 June 2007). "Too cute for comfort". BBC News. Archived from the original on 9 January 2011. Retrieved 9 January 2011.
  16. ^ a b Nekaris & Munds 2010, pp. 383–384.
  17. ^ a b c d e Nekaris et al. 2010, p. 878.
  18. ^ a b c Nekaris & Munds 2010, p. 384.
  19. ^ Nekaris & Munds 2010, p. 393.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Nekaris et al. 2010, p. 882.
  21. ^ Nekaris et al. 2010, p. 877–878.
  22. ^ a b c d e Adam, D. (9 July 2009). "The eyes may be cute but the elbows are lethal". The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 9 January 2011. Retrieved 9 January 2011.
  23. ^ a b c d Nekaris & Munds 2010, p. 390.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i j McGreal 2007b.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i Nekaris et al. 2010, p. 883.
  26. ^ UNEP-WCMC. "CITES species database: Nycticebus coucang". UNEP-WCMC Species Database. Retrieved 18 February 2011.
  27. ^ Redmond 2005, p. 14.
  28. ^ a b "CITES Appendices". Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). Archived from the original on 18 February 2011. Retrieved 18 February 2011.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Sakamoto, Masayuki (2007). "Slow lorises fly so fast into Japan". Japan Wildlife Conservation Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 January 2011. Retrieved 26 January 2011.
  30. ^ a b c Nekaris & Jaffe 2007, p. 187.
  31. ^ a b c d Starr et al. 2010, p. 22.
  32. ^ a b Nekaris et al. 2010, p. 879.
  33. ^ a b c Nekaris et al. 2010, p. 877.
  34. ^ a b Baird 1993, p. 20.
  35. ^ a b Starr et al. 2010, p. 18.
  36. ^ a b c d e f McGreal 2008, p. 8.
  37. ^ a b c d e f Navarro-Montes, Nekaris & Parish 2009.
  38. ^ Starr et al. 2010, pp. 18–19.
  39. ^ Nekaris et al. 2010, pp. 879–880.
  40. ^ Nekaris & Munds 2010, p. 392.

Literature cited

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  • Fitch-Snyder, H; Livingstone, K (2008). "Lorises: The Surprise Primate". ZooNooz. San Diego Zoo: 10–14. ISSN 0044-5282.
  • Nekaris, K.A.I.; Munds, R. (2010). "Chapter 22: Using facial markings to unmask diversity: the slow lorises (Primates: Lorisidae: Nycticebus spp.) of Indonesia". In Gursky-Doyen, S.; Supriatna, J (eds.). Indonesian Primates. New York: Springer. pp. 383–396. doi:10.1007/978-1-4419-1560-3_22. ISBN 978-1-4419-1559-7.
  • Nekaris, K. A. I.; Shepherd, C. R.; Starr, C. R.; Nijman, V. (2010). "Exploring cultural drivers for wildlife trade via an ethnoprimatological approach: a case study of slender and slow lorises (Loris and Nycticebus) in South and Southeast Asia". American Journal of Primatology. 72 (10): 877–886. doi:10.1002/ajp.20842. PMID 20806336. S2CID 21711250.
  • Redmond, Ian (2005). "The primate pet trade and its impact on biodiversity conservation". Born to be wild: Primates are not pets. London: International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW). Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 February 2011. Retrieved 18 February 2011.
  • Thorn, J.S.; Nijman, V.; Smith, D.; Nekaris, K.A.I. (2009). "Ecological niche modelling as a technique for assessing threats and setting conservation priorities for Asian slow lorises (Primates:Nycticebus)". Diversity and Distributions. 15 (2): 289–298. doi:10.1111/j.1472-4642.2008.00535.x. S2CID 21701018.
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  • loris-conservation.org – Provides a place for information and links to websites related to conservation of Asian lorises and African pottos