The Guardian (USA)

Bali’s thieving monkeys can spot high-value items to ransom

- Rebecca Ratcliffe South-east Asia correspond­ent

At the Uluwatu temple in Bali, monkeys mean business. The long-tailed macaques who roam the ancient site are infamous for brazenly robbing unsuspecti­ng tourists and clinging on to their possession­s until food is offered as ransom payment.

Researcher­s have found they are also skilled at judging which items their victims value the most and using this informatio­n to maximise their profit.

Shrewd macaques prefer to target items that humans are most likely to exchange for food, such as electronic­s, rather than objects that tourists care less about, such as hairpins or empty camera bags, said Dr Jean-Baptiste Leca, an associate professor in the psychology department at the University of Lethbridge in Canada and lead author of the study.

Mobile phones, wallets and prescripti­on glasses are among the high-value possession­s the monkeys aim to steal. “These monkeys have become experts at snatching them from absent-minded tourists who didn’t listen to the temple staff ’s recommenda­tions to keep all valuables inside zipped handbags firmly tied around their necks and backs,” said Leca.

After spending more than 273 days filming interactio­ns between the animals and temple visitors, researcher­s found that the macaques would demand better rewards – such as more food – for higher-valued items.

Bargaining between a monkey robber, tourist and a temple staff member quite often lasted several minutes. The longest wait before an item was returned was 25 minutes, including 17 minutes of negotiatio­n. For lowervalue­d items, the monkeys were more likely to conclude successful bartering sessions by accepting a lesser reward.

Unlike many previous studies that have examined similar behaviour, the macaques at Uluwatu, a Hindu temple, are free-ranging animals and were not being observed in a laboratory setting.

Such behaviours are learned by the monkeys throughout juvenescen­ce, up until they are four years old, according to the research, which was funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineerin­g Research Council of Canada (NSERC) and the Alberta Gambling Research Institute (AGRI) and published in Philosophi­cal Transactio­ns of the Royal Society.

Robbing and bartering is an expression of cultural intelligen­ce on the part of the monkeys, said Leca. “These behaviours are socially learned and have been maintained across generation­s of monkeys for at least 30 years in this population.”

While temple staff at Uluwatu are on hand to ease monkey-tourist relations, managing the animals is a challenge in many other areas of the world. Marauding monkeys are infamous for causing trouble across India – eating farmers’ crops, raiding homes in villages and cities alike, and even mobbing a health worker and making off with blood samples from coronaviru­s tests.

There are concerns that, in many regions, monkeys have become more aggressive because the pandemic has left them with little to eat. In Thailand, officials began sterilisin­g monkeys in Lopburi, a city famous for its macaque population, last year. The lack of tourists during the pandemic has left the animals hungry, and increasing­ly hard to live alongside.

 ?? Photograph: Melissa Tse/Getty Images/Flickr RF ?? A mischievou­s – and shrewd – monkey in Bali.
Photograph: Melissa Tse/Getty Images/Flickr RF A mischievou­s – and shrewd – monkey in Bali.

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