The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Monkey business on upswing in Florida

Video of antics goes viral as primates overrun state park.

- By Tamara Lush

ST. PETERSBURG, FLA. — There’s an upswing in monkey business in and around a state park in Florida, where bands of nonnative rhesus macaques live along a river that’s popular with kayakers and tourists.

Officials have closed two walking areas at Silver Springs State Park because of unwanted monkey interactio­ns with park guests. An observatio­n deck and a boardwalk are off-limits because the primates have essentiall­y taken over.

Park Manager Sally Lieb told the Ocala Star-Banner that the closed areas will be reopened only once “we’ve solved our issue, and our issue is that the monkeys have spent a lot of time in these areas.”

Researcher­s estimate anywhere between 150 and 200 wild rhesus macaques live in the park and an unknown number live nearby.

A video shot by a family showing seemingly aggressive monkeys on one of the park’s boardwalks made the rounds recently on social media.

Park rangers try to warn visitors not to feed the 20-pound, 2-foot tall-mammals and are stepping up patrols in sections where there are high possibilit­ies of monkey-human interactio­n.

The monkeys were introduced to the area in the 1930s by a tour boat operator named Colonel Tooey. He thought it would be a good idea to release six macaques on a small island in the Silver River and call it Monkey Island to draw tourists.

“He thought they would stay on Monkey Island,” said Eben Kirksey, a Florida native and a professor of environmen­tal humanities at UNSW Sydney in Australia. “But they are good swimmers.”

Many generation­s of monkeying around ensued, aided by the relative lack of natural predators other than alligators, which often eat young, naive primates on the riverbanks. The monkeys thrived in the warm climate and the park at one time sold “monkey chow” so visitors could feed the primates.

At one time in the 1980s, there were 400 of the animals in the park, prompting state officials to try to wrest control of the situation. Some of the females were sterilized. Previous attempts to cull the group drew strong opposition from locals — especially when some captured primates were sold to research labs.

“At least from a cultural perspectiv­e, the people who live in Ocala very much value their presence in the community,” Kirksey said.

But once again, state officials are considerin­g options to control the primates — after all, viral videos of charging monkeys aren’t the best publicity for the park.

There have been 18 confirmed reports of bites and scratches from the animals since they arrived at the park. Experts say monkeys can carry and transmit Herpes B-virus, but there’s no evidence that anyone has gotten sick from the Silver Springs monkeys.

“You definitely don’t want to get near them. You don’t want to antagonize them,” said Steve Johnson, an associate professor of wildlife ecology at University of Florida who researches the monkeys.

Johnson said there are four or five groups of monkeys in the park, and other groups are outside the park.

Recently, a homeowner 4 miles away captured photos of some 50 monkeys swarming his deer feeder. Brian Pritchard’s automatic camera, anchored to a tree, was even inspected by one monkey, whose face practicall­y fills a frame as others cavort in the background.

“Anybody who lives on our river, they always have the possibilit­y of seeing the monkeys,” said Pritchard, a 33-year-old taxidermis­t. “As long as you don’t bother them, they don’t bother you.”

‘You definitely don’t want to get near them.’ Steve Johnson Associate professor of wildlife ecology

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