Why Monkeys Sacred Of Baboons in Telugu | Why Farmers Petting Baboons to Protect Farms in Telugu
Why Monkeys Sacred Of Baboons in Telugu
Why Farmers Petting Baboons to Protect Farms in Telugu
కోతులు ఎందుకు బాబూన్ల పవిత్రమైనవి
పొలాలను రక్షించడానికి రైతులు బాబూన్లను ఎందుకు పెట్టుకుంటున్నారు
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The punishment for selling the Grey Langur is not very severe because it is a Schedule III animal
To owners of orchards they have become invaluable assets. The Grey Langur or the Hanuman Langur protects the crop from the numerical strong Rhesus Macaques.
Though the Grey Langur or the watch dogs of gardens and groves they are not available in pet shops. They are in fact protected by the Indian Wildlife Protection Act of 1972 and it is a crime to capture, cage or sell them. However the punishment for selling the Grey Langur is not very severe because they are Schedule III animals.
But most horticulturists know the exact place they should go to buy a tame Grey Langur.
Many residents of Tatakuntla village on Vissannapeta-Chatrai Road have in their possession several Grey Langur. The business has been continuing here for decades despite several attempts by the Forest Department to end it.
Some of the Grey Langurs are tied to the posts of thatched shelters erected exclusively for animals. Along side the langurs are goats and other domestic animals. Some other langurs that look more ferocious are kept in really cramped cages. “This is part of the taming process. The langur slowly gets used to humans and stops attacking them. Tame langurs are worth more to the traders,” says former Assistant Conservator of Forests P.Gracious.
VDO.AI
The langur seems to be currently the only protection the orchard owner has against the ever growing population of Rhesus monkeys. The understaffed Forest Department has considerably reduced, or, fully stopped monkey menace control programmes. About a decade ago monkey menace was often a topic of hot debate in Zilla Parishad meetings. This was followed by the Forest Department deploying trappers to catch the monkeys from the orchard owners and releasing them in deep forest.
US-based Italian Behaviour Biologists Dario Maestripieri in his book ‘Macachiavellian Intelligence: How Rhesus Macaques and Humans Have Conquered the World’ says that the Rhesus monkeys are highly intelligent and adaptable. With the disappearance of forests they are learning to live among the humans. Maestripieri says that the m
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