The Guardian (USA)

Shock and gnaw: rat-eating macaques 'stun' scientists

- Jamie Fullerton

Scientists in Malaysia have said they were “stunned” to discover monkeys regularly killing and eating rats on palm oil plantation­s, providing a natural antipest measure in the country, which is responsibl­e for 30% of the world’s palm oil production.

A report released in Current Biology on Monday, showed that southern pigtailed macaques, generally thought to eat mainly fruit plus occasional­ly lizards and birds, foraged for rats on plantation­s. The authors said that the monkeys’ appetite for rodents showed that rather than being pests, as is commonly believed, the primates’ presence reduced crop losses.

“I was stunned when I first observed that macaques feed on rats in plantation­s,” said Nadine Ruppert, senior zoology lecturer at University Sains Malaysia, who co-wrote the report. “I did not expect them to hunt these relatively large rodents or that they would even eat so much meat.”

The report monitored macaques between January 2016 and September 2018 in plantation­s around Malaysia’s

Segari Melintang forest reserve. It showed that each of the monitored macaque groups, featuring an average of 44 monkeys, killed around 3,000 rats each year. Rats are estimated to damage an average of 10% of oil palm crops by eating its fruit, compared with the macaques which damage 0.54%. As a result, the authors said that, overall, the rat-eating monkeys help save crops.

Malaysia creates around 19.5m tons of palm oil per year – the world’s most popular vegetable oil – making it one of the biggest producers of the product globally. It is used in many products, from shampoo to lipstick to bread and chocolate. It is also a cleaning agent and is used as a component in fuels such as biodiesel.

Plantation­s’ effects on forests and peatlands and the wild animals that live there have made them hugely controvers­ial. Large areas are often burned and cleared to make way for the plantation­s, releasing large amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

Southern pig-tailed macaques are listed as vulnerable by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature, but are regularly shot by palm oil plantation staff in Malaysia. The report authors hope their findings will help reduce such behaviour and promote a “winwin solution”.

“Our results suggest important opportunit­ies for mitigating humanwildl­ife conflicts,” they wrote. “Farmers and palm oil companies are encouraged to protect primates in their natural habitat via wildlife corridors between forest patches and viable interfaces between forests and plantation­s.”

 ??  ?? Southern pig-tailed macaques are listed as vulnerable and regularly shot on palm oil plantation­s, but new research shows they may act as natural pest control against rats. Photograph: Genevieve Vallee/Alamy Stock Photo
Southern pig-tailed macaques are listed as vulnerable and regularly shot on palm oil plantation­s, but new research shows they may act as natural pest control against rats. Photograph: Genevieve Vallee/Alamy Stock Photo
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