The Columbus Dispatch

Feeding Florida monkeys risky, illegal

- By Karin Brulliard

Attention, vacationer­s: It’s now illegal to feed wild monkeys in Florida, and doing so could get you a $500 fine.

Wild monkeys? Yes, though they would more accurately be called feral monkeys. Although Florida, with its temperate climate and lush vegetation, may look like an ideal backdrop for swinging little primates, monkeys are not native to the state. But decades after being released from captivity, they have made themselves right at home in nature.

In Fort Lauderdale, a tiny population of squirrel monkeys is believed to reside in the gardens of a historic estate; lore says the species may have been introduced to spice up the site in the 1940s or perhaps descended from a released pair that had entertaine­d patrons at a local bar. North of Miami, in the mangrove forests near Dania Beach, lives a fairly robust population of African vervet monkeys that grew out of animals let loose in the 1950s from a tourist attraction that also bred primates for research. They are known to munch on fruit, raisins, trail mix, gummy bears and other provisions offered by humans, according to the Sun Sentinel.

But the biggest concern of the state wildlife board that approved the feeding ban, which took effect Feb. 11, are rhesus macaques. These Asia natives are found in a few spots, but they live most comfortabl­y in and around central Florida’s Silver Springs State Park, where they were first introduced in the 1930s by a riverboat tour guide named Colonel Tooey. He put a half-dozen on an island in the Silver River to wow clients — and the monkeys turned out to be adept swimmers. Researcher­s counted 175 in the park in 2015, but the population is expanding and has spilled beyond its borders, the commission says.

Tooey was right: The monkeys are a draw. Boaters and amblers delight in spotting them and feeding them. But they can also be aggressive. Carli Segelson, a commission spokeswoma­n, said in an email that the monkeys have “bitten or scratched multiple people in Florida.” Last summer, a viral video captured rhesus macaques at Silver Spring charging visitors.

“It was like, ‘Oh cool, look at the monkeys,’” Susie Ramsey, whose family was charged, told USA Today. “Then all of a sudden, ‘Oh my God, our lives are in danger!’”

A monkey attack truly could be life-threatenin­g, according to a recent study published in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention journal Emerging Infectious Diseases. Researcher­s from the University of Florida found that as many as 30 percent of the park’s rhesus macaques shed the herpes B virus in their saliva, urine and feces — all of which visitors could be exposed to.

The virus is extremely rare in humans, and there’s never been a report of transmissi­on from wild rhesus macaques to people. But lab monkeys have infected people with the virus, which has caused fatal encephalit­is. The study therefore concluded that the risk in Florida should be considered a “public health concern.”

A state official cited that concern in announcing the ban, which put monkeys in a do-not-feed category along with coyotes, raccoons, bears, pelicans and other Florida fauna. “Feeding wild monkeys creates an elevated risk to human health because it brings them into closer contact with people,” Thomas Eason, the assistant executive director of the commission, said in a statement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States