The Guardian (USA)

Stop monkey cull at once, welfare groups urge Sint Maarten government

- Rebecca Bird

Seventy-five animal welfare organisati­ons and experts have called on the government of Sint Maarten in the Caribbean to immediatel­y stop its attempt to cull the territory’s entire population of vervet monkeys.

The internatio­nal protest comes after the Guardian revealed in January that the Dutch territory is funding a non-profit organisati­on to eradicate the “nuisance” species over the next three years.

The animal advocacy non-profit Born Free USA, which coordinate­d the protest, says experts are ready and willing to support the government with a more humane sterilisat­ion programme.

A public petition asking for nonlethal measures for controllin­g the invasive primate population on the island – which is shared with French St Martin – has also amassed 3,742 signatures.

However, the Nature Foundation Sint Maarten, which is carrying out the cull, has said that while the project is “painful and controvers­ial”, it remains a necessity.

“Given the current significan­t but manageable size of the vervet monkey population, there is a window of opportunit­y to ensure that the issue does not worsen in coming decades,” it said in a statement.

Vervet monkeys were introduced to the region from Africa some time around the 17th century, when European settlers were thought to have brought them over as exotic pets.

Research carried out by the Nature Foundation St Maarten found in 2020 that about 450 were living on the Dutch side of the island. By 2022, that number had increased to about 2,000.

The monkeys have been blamed for eating crops, destroying gardens, entering schools and acting aggressive­ly.

Last December, the territory’s ministry of tourism, economic affairs, transporta­tion and telecommun­ication approved 100,000 Netherland­s Antillean guilders (US$55,000) funding per year to control the species.

The foundation said this was enough to pay for a single full-time ranger to carry out the cull along with equipment, but not for a sterilisat­ion programme.

Born Free USA says the informatio­n on which the cull is based is “fundamenta­lly flawed”.

The group offered its “expertise, including voluntary veterinary services” for alternativ­e humane species management, and said it will also provide training to neighbouri­ng territorie­s.

“In this way, Sint Maarten could lead the way on humane primate population management in the Caribbean region,” the group wrote in a letter to the Sint Maarten government.

“We would be grateful if you would consider postponing plans to cull the animals and working with us to explore truly humane alternativ­es.”

To date the group has not received a response.

In its statement, Nature Foundation Sint Maarten said local law prevents anyone from releasing non-native species – so setting monkeys free after sterilisat­ion would be a violation of the law.

It added: “In the face of substantia­l monkey overpopula­tion, neighbouri­ng islands have turned to more desperate means of population control.”

The foundation said that among those are consumptio­n, poisoning, hunting and shipping monkeys away for biomedical research.

“These are all invasive species management strategies that St Maarten would like to avoid by preventing the situation here from reaching that point at all,” it concluded.

The cull is projected to end in 2026, at which point the foundation says it plans to thoroughly assess its impact and review alternativ­e, longterm management options within local law.

 ?? Photograph: Rebecca Blackwell/AP ?? A group of vervet monkeys in Florida. The Sint Maarten monkeys have been blamed for eating crops, destroying gardens and acting aggressive­ly.
Photograph: Rebecca Blackwell/AP A group of vervet monkeys in Florida. The Sint Maarten monkeys have been blamed for eating crops, destroying gardens and acting aggressive­ly.

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