The Post

Endangered monkeys tracked down and vaccinated against yellow fever

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In a small lab nestled in Brazil’s Atlantic Forest, researcher­s with gloved hands and masked faces cradle four tiny golden monkeys so a veterinari­an can delicately slide a needle under the thin skin of each sedated animal’s belly.

The next morning, biologist Andreia Martins brings them to the precise spot where they were caught. She opens the wire cages and the monkeys dart out, hopping to a tree or the ground, ascending the canopy and regrouping as a family. They chatter noisily as they vanish into the rainforest.

This brief, strange encounter with humanity has been for the sake of their own health – and the survival of their kind. These endangered wild monkeys, called golden lion tamarins, have now been vaccinated against yellow fever, part of a pathbreaki­ng campaign to save a threatened species.

‘‘Vaccinatin­g wild animals for the sake of animals, not to protect humans, is novel,’’ said Luis Paulo Ferraz, president of the nonprofit Golden Lion Tamarin Associatio­n.

When yellow fever began to spread in Brazil in 2016, resulting in more than 2000 human infections and around 750 deaths, it also quickly killed a third of the highly vulnerable tamarins, the majority of them in just a few months. So scientists in Brazil developed a yellow fever vaccine customised for the endangered monkeys.

The inoculatio­n campaign started in 2021, and already more than 300 tamarins have been vaccinated. The first such effort in Brazil, it raises vital questions about how far to go to save a species from extinction.

One of the traditiona­l adages of conservati­on is ‘‘Leave it be’’. But in an age when every corner of the globe is touched by human influence – from melting icebergs to fragmented forests to plastic-filled oceans – a new generation of scientists and environmen­talists is increasing­ly calling for more interventi­onist approaches to save wild animals and ecosystems.

Carlos R. Ruiz-Miranda, a conservati­on biologist at State University of Northern Rio de Janeiro, is among the scientists who have worked for more than three decades to protect the golden lion tamarins, twice going to their rescue when extinction threatened. He says the vaccinatio­ns are the only option left: ‘‘Is it too extreme? Give me another alternativ­e.’’

 ?? AP ?? Field co-ordinator Andreia Martins releases a golden lion tamarin after it was inoculated against yellow fever, in the Atlantic Forest region of Silva Jardim, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil.
AP Field co-ordinator Andreia Martins releases a golden lion tamarin after it was inoculated against yellow fever, in the Atlantic Forest region of Silva Jardim, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil.

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