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"Twenty-Five Primates on Brink of Extinction, Study Says"

"Twenty-five species of humans' closest living relatives -- apes, monkeys and lemurs -- need urgent protection from extinction, a report by international conservation groups said on Monday."



"Many of the primates, from the Ecuadorean brown-headed spider monkey to the eastern black-crested gibbon in China and Vietnam, are under threat from human destruction of forests, from hunting and from illegal wildlife trade.

The study said five of the 25 most endangered primates were from Africa, six from the Indian Ocean island of Madagascar, nine from Asia, and five from South America, including the Ka'apor capuchin monkey in Brazil.

'Mankind's closest living relatives ... are on the brink of extinction and in need of urgent conservation measures,' said the report by groups including the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)."

Alister Doyle reports for Reuters October 16, 2012.

SEE ALSO:

"Primates Vanishing Under Relentless Human Pressure" (ENS)
 

Source: Reuters, 10/16/2012