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         Primates Wild:     more books (49)
  1. Chimpanzee: The Living Link Between 'Man' and 'Beast' (Edinburgh Medal Lecture, No 3) by Jane Goodall, 1992-09
  2. A Chimp in the Family: The True Story of Two Infants--One Human, One Chimpanzee--Growing Up Together by Vince Smith, 2004-03-08
  3. Cenzoo: The Story of a Baby Gorilla by Joe Verrengia, 1997-09
  4. Naturalistic Environments in Captivity for Animal Behavior Research (Suny Series in Endangered Species) by Edward F. Gibbons, Everett J. Wyers, 1994-04
  5. Sex and Friendship in Baboons by Barbara B. Smuts, 1999-12-15
  6. The Barbary Macaque: A Case Study in Conservation by John E. Fa, 1984-09-01
  7. Chimpanzee Politics: Power and Sex among Apes by Frans de Waal, 1998-04-23

61. Stanford Magazine > November/December 2001 > Feature Story > Going Wild
Baboons—singularlooking primates with a wild hairdo, close-set eyes, a long muzzleand permanent leathery pads covering their rear ends—are great subjects
http://www.stanfordalumni.org/atstanford/sapolsky
Going Wild A biologist gets in touch with his inner primate. by Christopher Vaughan Photography by Peter Stember Sidebar
He Shoots, He Scores

Jungle Wisdom

ROBERT SAPOLSKY
Sapolsky is well-known around campus for his fascinating lectures in human behavioral biology. To the public at large, he is best known for three books: The Trouble with Testosterone (1997) and (2001). The earlier books concentrate on his scientific work, but is a more personal look at his life in Africa, introducing us equally to the baboons and the human primates he encounters. As with most of his writing, the book is very funny. New York Times
Sapolsky himself has cascading hair and a full beard, which sometimes gives him a resemblance to Tom Hanks as a third-year castaway. In person, he is pleasant, soft-spoken and self-deprecating, someone you might easily imagine living happily alone in a tent in Africa. Watch him in action, however, or read between the lines about what he actually does in the field, and you get a completely different picture.
Courtesy Robert Sapolsky
It looks as though Robert Sapolsky has settled into a human troop at last.

62. Polyandry In Primates
They re only primates who twin routinely. This was based on a few things there sonly one breeding female per group in the wild and also polyandry was pretty
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~phyl/anthro/polyandry.html
Cooperative Polyandry
Definition: "Groups in which two or more males mate with a single female during a single breeding season and collaborate to raise her offspring"
Expectation of Polygyny and Selfish Behavior
Cooperative polyandry seems to fly in the face of expectations in two ways- First of all, males are expected to raise their reproductive success by gaining access to females. Females don't maximize reproductive success by getting more males! Secondly, it looks like altruism- one of the males is taking care of offspring not related to him! Why is he being a sucker Cooperative polyandry is pretty rare for these reasons. It occurs in scattered animals- some raptors like hawks and eagles have polyandrous mating systems. Also african hunting dogs. In primates, humans in Asia with traditional cultures have polyandrous mating systems, usually for much the same reasons as callitrichids do, who are the only non-human polyandrous primates. Only a few have been studied; common marmoset, cottontop tamarin, golden tamarin, saddleback tamarin.
Cooperative Polyandry in Callitrichids
Characteristics of callitrichids
They're the smallest of anthropoid primates; all under 1kg. Generally territorial. Diet is mixed- fruit and small prey items. Some eat gums, especially the marmosets who are specialized gummivores. Another important feature is that they produce twins- about 80% of births are twins. They're only primates who twin routinely.

63. MEMORANDUM OF AGREEMENT UPON THE RESCUE OF ENDANGERED PRIMATES OF THE SOCIALIST
It is important that a special facility be established to maintain small captivepopulations of endangered primates whose wild populations are no longer viable
http://www.novexcn.com/viet_rescu_endang_primates.html
English Commentary MEMORANDUM OF AGREEMENT UPON THE RESCUE OF ENDANGERED PRIMATES OF
THE SOCIALIST REPUBLIC OF VIETNAM
(Promulgated by the Ministry of Forestry on March 23, 1993) SUBJECT: ENDAGERED SPECIES; FORRESTRY ISSUING-DEPT: MINISTRY OF FORRESTRY OF VIETNAM ISSUE-DATE: IMPLEMENT-DATE: LENGTH: 1184 words TEXT: Background and Justification
It is important that a special facility be established to maintain small captive populations of endangered primates whose wild populations are no longer viable, or for those animals that are confiscated from the illegal trade, and provision should be made for long-term field studies of remaining wild populations and their threatened tropical forest habitats. With the assistance of the international zoological and conservation communities. it is also important that captive breeding programs for several of these primate taxa be developed as soon as possible as an insurance against the possible extinction of wild populations.
Objectives
It is recognised that:
a. increased protection for and a better scientific understanding of wild primate populations and tropical forests in the Socialist Republic of Vietnam is of the highest priority;

64. Stuffed Animals - Plush Toys - Monkeys - Collectibles - Fun Stuff - Online Games
But he ain t no monkey s uncle! Jungle Jumble Coloring Page Let your creativityrun wild! Color a crazy bunch of primates from the wild Republic!
http://www.wildrepublic.com/level1/level1.asp
This branch is free and open to everyone gibbons, tamarins, even you.
Learn about this wild bunch of characters. E-Postcards
E-mail a wild, animated postcard to your family and friends. It's free! Triviaroo!
In this wild trivia game, there are more questions than you can shake a banana at! Which ones will you get this time? Play Checkers Against Fenyang:
With this version of checkers, you play against a monkey. But he ain't no monkey's uncle! Jungle Jumble Coloring Page:
Let your creativity run wild! Color a crazy bunch of primates from the Wild Republic! Make A Chimp Mask:
We'll make a monkey out of you! Color, cut out, and assemble this fun mask to wear.

65. KSBK Helps Confiscate Primates In Jakarta
wildlife conservation. We believe that essentially all primates offeredfor sale in our country’s bird markets are wildcaught.
http://www.ippl.org/01-03-25.html
International Primate Protection League
SINCE 1973: WORKING TO PROTECT GIBBONS AND ALL LIVING PRIMATES
KSBK Helps Confiscate Primates in Jakarta
by Rosek Nursahid
November 2002
KSBK (Animal Conservation for Life) has been very successful in its recent work to recover endangered animals that are being kept or sold illegally in Indonesia. August 2002 was an especially busy month for our organization. KSBK members with confiscated gibbon Java’s dismal "bird markets"
One of the primary activities of KSBK is to place constant pressure on the Indonesian government to enforce wildlife protection laws. In Indonesia, as elsewhere, the illegal trade in wild animals has been a serious threat to wildlife conservation. We believe that essentially all primates offered for sale in our country’s "bird markets" are wild-caught. Indonesia’s "bird markets" are actually open-air animal markets, where mammals and reptiles of all descriptions-as well as birds-are sold for use as pets or meat under miserable conditions. Primates such as orangutans, siamangs, gibbons, slow lorises, and ebony langurs are freely traded at Javanese bird markets. The two largest bird markets in Java are Pramuka and Barito. Both are located in Jakarta, Indonesia’s capital city.

66. The Plight Of Vietnam's Primates
primate groups back to the wild. The eventual release of these captiveprimates will hopefully strengthen the wild populations.
http://www.ippl.org/plight.html
International Primate Protection League
SINCE 1973: WORKING TO PROTECT GIBBONS AND ALL LIVING PRIMATES The Plight Of Vietnam's Primates As extinction of Vietnams wildlife looms near, the Endangered Primate Rescue Center, known as EPRC, is giving monkeys a fighting chance
by Lynne R. Baker IPPL member Lynne Baker worked as a volunteer for the EPRC from October 1998 to July 1999. She was involved in primate field surveys sponsored by the Frankfurt Zoological Society, public relations, and fund-raising for the center. To the scientific community, Vietnam intrigues and entices. It is the countrys unknowns ! the allure of a new discovery ! that attract many to this place. And with good reason. As recently as 1997, a new primate species was described from Vietnam: the Grey-shanked douc langur (scientific name Pygathrix cinereus). There was also the discovery of the Sao La (Pseudoryx nghetinhensis) in 1992 and the Giant Muntjac (Megamuntiacus vuquangensis) in 1994. In fact, of the seven large mammal species discovered worldwide in this century, four were described from Vietnam in the 1990s. All this excitement over new species comes with strings, however: Now that weve found this rare and endangered animal, how do we save it? Conservation efforts are underway, although many are relatively new. Due to the constant presence of war in Vietnam for years, many conservation organizations and researchers stayed clear. Today progress is being made, but the demise of Vietnams wildlife continues to threaten all too near.

67. ABCNEWS.com : Vietnam's Tiny Primates At Risk
Southeast Asia. That s one of the reasons why no one is sure justhow many of these elusive primates are left in the wild. In a
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/scitech/DailyNews/endangered_pygmyloris010508.htm
var SectionID="SciTech"; var SubsectionID="DailyNews"; var NameID="endangered_pygmyloris010508";
June 6, 2001 Good Morning America World News Tonight PrimeTime Nightline ...
ABCNEWS.com
GO TO: Select a Topic Sci/Tech Index HOMEPAGE SCI/TECH FEATURE
Two baby pygmy lorises at the San Diego Zoo. The zoo's research facility has been studying how to preserve the endangered primate, whose rain forest home in Vietnam is threatened. (San Diego Zoo) Furry Primates at Risk Tiny Primates at Risk in Darkness of Vietnam's Forests
May 9 STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Fluffy Primates at Risk
Captive Breeding in North America
Not only are these rare primates good at hiding, they're found in remote rain forests of Southeast Asia. That's one of the reasons why no one is sure just how many of these elusive primates are left in the wild. In a partnership with Vietnamese scientists, the San Diego Zoo has had success in studying these small furry animals , which move slowly under the cover of darkness. Fluffy Primates at Risk "They're in very remote areas," says Helena Fitch-Snyder, a behavioral biologist at the zoo. "They're nocturnal animals so to find them, you have to go out at night." Lorises have physically appealing faces with the large eyes typical of nocturnal animals. They weigh only a few pounds and stick to traveling in trees, where they have remarkable agility.

68. Bossou, Guinea BIBLIOGRAPHY
primates. Sugiyama, Y., Fushimi, T., Sakura, O. Matsuzawa, T. (1993). Handpreference and tool use in wild chimpanzees. primates. 34 151159.
http://weber.ucsd.edu/~jmoore/apesites/Bossou/BossouBibAu.html
Bossou Bibliography
By author; click to see arranged by date
  • Chimpanzees in Western Africa
  • Derrick, R. (1994). Culture in a nutshell: Chimp gives lessons in learning. BBC Wildlife Magagine.
  • Primatology Today . Amsterdam: Elsevier.
  • Pan African News.
  • Am. J. Primatol.
  • J. Comp. Psychol.
  • Kortlandt, A. (1986). The use of stone tools by wild-living chimpanzees and earliest hominids. J. Hum. Evol.
  • Primates.
  • Chimpanzees in the wild, Guinea 1966-1967: Sixth Netherlands chimpanzee expedition. (Transcripts of film/video texts) . Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam.
  • Matsuzawa, T. (1991). Nesting cups and metatools in chimpanzees. Beh. Brain Sci.
  • Chimpanzee Cultures . Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • Great Ape Societies . Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press.
  • Matsuzawa, T. (1997). The death of an infant chimpanzees at Bossou, Guinea. Pan Africa News.
  • Primates.
  • Reaching into Thought: the Minds of the Great Apes . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Primatology Today . Amsterdam: Elsevier Science Publishers.
  • Sakura, O. (1994). Factors affecting party size and composition of chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) at Bossou, Guinea. Int. J. Primatol.

69. Bossou, Guinea BIBLIOGRAPHY
13 127169. 1993. Sugiyama, Y., Fushimi, T., Sakura, O. Matsuzawa, T. Handpreference and tool use in wild chimpanzees. primates. 34 151-159. 1993.
http://weber.ucsd.edu/~jmoore/apesites/Bossou/BossouBibDa.html
Bossou Bibliography
By date; click to see arranged by author
  • Vakblad voor Biologen.
  • 1968. Sugiyama, Y. Social organization of chimpanzees in the Budongo Forest, Uganda. Primates.
  • Chimpanzees in Western Africa
  • Primates.
  • Primates.
  • Chimpanzees in the wild, Guinea 1966-1967: Sixth Netherlands chimpanzee expedition. (Transcripts of film/video texts) . Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam.
  • 1981. Sugiyama, Y. Observation on the population dynamics and behavior of wild chimpanzees at Bossou, Guinea, 1979-1980. Primates.
  • 1984. Sugiyama, Y. Population dynamics of wild chimpanzees at Bossou, Guinea, between 1976 and 1983. Primates.
  • 1986. Kortlandt, A. The use of stone tools by wild-living chimpanzees and earliest hominids. J. Hum. Evol.
  • Primates.
  • Primates.
  • 1988. Sugiyama, Y. Grooming interactions among adult chimpanzees at Bossou, Guinea, with special reference to social structure. Int. J. Primatol.
  • Folia primatol.
  • 1989. Sugiyama, Y. Description of some characteristic behaviors and discussion on their propagation process among chimpanzees of Bossou, Guinea. pp. 43-7 IN Sugiyama, Y. (Ed.), Behavioral studies of wild chimpanzees at Bossou, Guinea

70. DIARRHEAL DISEASES OF NONHUMAN PRIMATES
PATHOLOGY OF SELECTED wild UNGULATESÓ. Trunk paralysis (“Floppy trunk syndrome”)A disease predominantly in wild bulls in Zimbabwe and South Africa.
http://zcog.org/zcog frames/Pathology Wild Ungulates/Pathology Wild Ungulates.ht
PATHOLOGY OF SELECTED WILD UNGULATES Linda Munson, DVM, PhD School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis BLACK RHINOCEROS: Ulcerative and vesicular skin disease : (Superficial necrolytic dermatopathy). A recurrent skin disease of unknown cause, but with characteristics of diseases caused by hypoaminoacidemia in other species. May be secondary to metabolic changes from captive stress. Gross lesions: Vesicles and plaques progressing to ulcers affecting pressure points, oral mucosa, tips of the ears and tail and other locations, usually with bilateral symmetry. Histopathology: Lesions similar to superficial necrolytic dermatopathy consisting of acanthosis, parakeratosis, and laminar hydropic degeneration of the epidermis. Eosinophilic granulomas : One of the diseases in black rhinoceros that cause collagenolysis. Most lesions occur in the oral and nasal cavity and can associated with marked hemorrhage clinically. Gross lesions: Nodular, ulcerated masses on the oral and nasal mucosa or in the dermis. Histopathology: Marked eosinophilic infiltrates with some organization into granulomas.

71. Andy Kerr - Save The Primates And Free Willy
bond with the animal species with the most intelligence and they need not be primates. TheKeiko Free Willy Foundation wants to return the whale to the wild.
http://www.andykerr.net/ChieftainCols/Col33.html
Western Larch, © George Wuerthner You are visiting Andy Kerr's Column #33
Return to: Chieftain Columns Index Andy Kerr Home Page
Site Map

Save the Primates and Free Willy
Whales belong in oceans, not zoos. Andy Kerr Home Page Topic Areas About Andy Kerr Books by Andy Kerr Chieftain Columns ... Site Map By Andy Kerr Column #33 - Go to next column Length: 750 words Published: 23 October 1997, Wallowa County Chieftain When my parents first took me to the Portland (now Washington Park) Zoo, I tarried most at the monkey and gorilla exhibits (really just cages without bars). They could kind of walk like humans (though their knuckles tended to drag), and could grasp tools like humans. They seemed to be able to communicate with sounds and gestures. They appeared to be engaged in playful activities. Books later told me that primates express a variety of same emotions human do, including surprise, happiness, sadness, grief, anger and depression.

72. EBRA (European Biomedical Research Association, EBRA Bulletin
for using primates and they have focused their main activities on secondary issues,such as supply and transport of primates, the use of wildcaught animals
http://www.ebra.org/bulletin/july02_96.html
EBRA Bulletin
July 1996 The supply and use
of primates in the EU

One of the more important animal research issues being discussed in Europe is the supply and use of non-human primates in research and testing. The figures published in the 1991 European Union (EU) statistics show that there were 8,545 such primates used in the EU that year, with the majority being used in the UK, Germany and France.
The use of primates
The objections to the use of primates comes mostly from campaigning groups who have targeted this issue. However, the scientific justification for using primates cannot be so easily dismissed. A number of areas of virology (including some AIDS research and vaccine development and testing), biotechnology product development and neurobiology research are currently completely dependent on the use of non-human primates. The pressure against primate use has received some support from more respected voices but the arguments presented have not been found convincing. Indeed, it is likely that even the campaigning groups recognise the strength of the scientific justification for using primates and they have focused their main activities on secondary issues, such as supply and transport of primates, the use of wild-caught animals, etc to put pressure on the main issue.

73. This Week
or write to Kathleen Wong, This Week in California wild, California Academy of offacial features in chimps, gorillas, and other primates, European researchers
http://www.calacademy.org/thisweek/
NATURAL SCIENCE HIGHLIGHTS June 9, 2004 SUBSCRIBE ARCHIVE Concise coverage of natural science news with an emphasis on stories about California and the West. Items are compiled by the staff of California Wild and the Academy's Biodiversity Resource Center. This Week Quick Guide: Settling Polynesia Body Complexity GM Salmon First Seashells ... Mars Rovers To contact This Week in California Wild, e-mail calwild@calacademy.org
or write to Kathleen Wong, This Week in California Wild, California Academy of Sciences, 875 Howard Street, San Francisco, CA 94103 Stories adapted by Kathleen M. Wong
Rats Reveal Ancient Polynesians' Path
A new study of rat DNA has shed new light on how the migration routes of the ancient Polynesians. When the ancestors of the Polynesians first sailed into Oceania about 3,500 years ago, they carried food supplies along with them that included Pacific rats (Rattus exulans). Now Elizabeth Matisoo-Smith and Judith H. Robins of the University of Auckland, New Zealand, report that rat genetics helps clarify how the Pacific was settled. The researchers analyzed the mitochondrial DNA of Pacific rats from around Polynesia, southeast Asia, and Papua New Guinea. Because these rats don't swim, the scientists could assume they had arrived on the islands via human canoes. They report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences finding three distinct genetic populations of rats, each associated with a particular island group. The results rule out the "Fast Train" theory of dispersal, which suggest Polynesians colonized the islands soon after leaving southeast Asia and had little contact with indigenous people. Instead, the Polynesians probably spread more slowly into the region, and had extensive contact with local people along the way.

74. Food For Thought: A Virus Crosses Over To Wild-Animal Hunters, Science News Onli
In the current study, Wolfe and colleagues wanted to see whether SFV is easilytransmitted into people who typically encounter primates in the wild.
http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20040403/food.asp
Math Trek
Riding on Square Wheels
Food for Thought
A Virus Crosses Over to Wild-Animal Hunters
Science Safari
Understanding Evolution
TimeLine
70 Years Ago in
Science News
Week of April 3, 2004; Vol. 165, No. 14
A Virus Crosses Over to Wild-Animal Hunters
Edna Francisco A potentially dangerous virus is moving from nonhuman primates to Africans who hunt and eat wild animals, a new study suggests. Scientists say reducing people's consumption of wild-animal meat could minimize the chance of spreading this and other viruses that cause emerging diseases. CLOSE ENCOUNTER. Hunting and butchering a gorilla apparently infected a 45-year-old man with a new virus typically found only in nonhuman primates, according to a recent study.
To feed their families wild meat, or bushmeat, people in rural Africa have been hunting a variety of animals, including pigs, antelope, and primates for generations. The Zoological Society of London estimates that bushmeat makes up 50 to 85 percent of protein in the diet of tropical-forest dwellers in Africa. SIV and related viruses inhabit their normal nonhuman primate hosts without doing harm. However, "when they cross species boundaries, that's when they have a potential for illness," says Nathan Wolfe, a biologist at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

75. The Emergence Of Peaceful Culture In Wild Baboons
features peaceful wild baboons. Join our email list, Reports existof transmission of culture in nonhuman primates. Robert M. Sapolsky
http://www.animalsentience.com/features/peaceful_wild_baboons.htm
features : peaceful wild baboons Reports exist of transmission of culture in nonhuman primates. Robert M. Sapolsky (Stanford University, California, USA) and Lisa J. Share (National Museums of Kenya Karen, Nairobi, Kenya) examined this in a troop of savanna baboons studied since 1978. During the mid-1980s, half of the males died from tuberculosis; because of circumstances of the outbreak, it was more aggressive males who died, leaving a cohort of atypically unaggressive survivors. A decade later, these behavioral patterns persisted. Males leave their natal troops at adolescence; by the mid-1990s, no males remained who had resided in the troop a decade before. Thus, critically, the troop's unique culture was being adopted by new males joining the troop. This article, published by the Public Library of Science, tells of some of their findings. You can find the complete research article here
For a printable version of this extract, click here.

76. Primates - Order Primates
Hamadryas, etc Papio hamadryas Chacma Baboon - Papio ursinus ZOO IN THE wild. Grey-cheekedMangabey - Lophocebus albigena The African primates at Home Home
http://www.animalomnibus.com/primates.htm
Primates - Order Primates

77. VSC 443/543 (U Of A) Biology Of Nonhuman Primates
species of marmosets and tamarins that have been established as the principal newworld laboratory primates are relatively common and unthreatened in the wild.
http://www.ahsc.arizona.edu/uac/notes/classes/primatebiology/primatesbiology.htm
BIOLOGY OF NONHUMAN PRIMATES RESEARCH ANIMAL METHODS
VSC 443/543 - Fall 2001
Lecture notes for November 7, 2001
Michael S. Rand, DVM
Chief, Biotechnology Support Service
University Animal Care
University of Arizona - Tucson CLASSIFICATION OF NONHUMAN PRIMATES (see Table 1 Nonhuman primates are classified into four major categories: PROSIMIANS, NEW WORLD MONKEYS ( Platyrrhiny ), OLD WORLD MONKEYS ( Catarrhina ), and APES ( Hominoidea ). The true prosimians are primitive primates far removed from human stock and are found in arboreal habitats. The Lemuriformes of Madagascar are classified as endangered species and trade in them is not permitted. So far, no particular uses for them in medical research have been found. The new world monkeys (NWM) comprise two families the Callitrichidae (marmosets and tamarinds) and Cebidae, the members of which vary greatly in size, diet, habits, and color. They are more distantly related to man than the old world primates and may for this reason be a less reliable model for medical studies. Only five groups are in regular use in laboratories: 1. Marmosets and tamarins (

78. Primates
Most primates in the wild are endangered and pictures arethe only way some breeders will see that species.
http://www.gotexoticsonline.com/exotic-animals/primates.shtml
Home Primates
Primates
Most primates in the wild are endangered and pictures are the only way some breeders will see that species. The forest that is habitat to most species is being logged and cleared by commercial loggers and subsistence farmers for land and firewood. The fate of these species will be decided in the next five years. We need to protect these endangered species and their habitats or they will both disappear and be lost forever. Most primates in the wild are endangered and pictures are the only way some breeders will see that species. To view a complete gallery of pictures, just click on Pictures for easy viewing!
Bush Baby
Capuchin Monkey
Monkey
Orangutan ...
Squirrel Monkey
Primates
Pictures, Breeders
Most species of primate live in tropical, developing countries, and humans compete with them for resources. They are the mammals that are man’s closest biological relative. We share 98.4% of the same DNA with chimpanzees. There are 234 species of the family tree. Most primates in the wild are endangered and pictures are the only way some breeders will see that species.
Click here to see all the pictures!

79. One Voice : Air France
These proved that in addition to infant primates, wildcaught monkeys had beentransported with fraudulent documents, claiming they were captive-born.
http://www.experimentation-animale.org/english/transports.html
Rapports Multimedia Boutique Contact ...
Laboratoires

Transports
Sauvetages

Produits chimiques

Biotechnologie

Justice for the baby primates transported by Air France
Print

Thanks to the hard work and determination of Dr Shirley McGreal, chairwoman of the International Primate Protection League (IPPL), five years after the facts justice will at last be done for the baby monkeys that Air France flew to vivisection laboratories.
In 1997, an eyewitness alerted Dr McGreal after spotting dozens of baby monkeys in crates at Chicago airport, when American legislation forbids transportation of young animals.
Dr McGreal managed to obtain documents pertaining to shipments of primates in April and May 1997. These proved that in addition to infant primates, wild-caught monkeys had been transported with fraudulent documents, claiming they were captive-born. (Shirley McGreal is at the origin of the photo of Thomas, our emblem in the O of One Voice). THE ACCUSED FACE LONG PRISON TERMS THE RESPONSIBILITY OF AIR FRANCE Translation : Sandra Petch Europe for Animal Rights One Voice 23, rue du Chanoine Poupard

80. Learn About Wild Primates From Toy Box 2000 Collectibles Directory
Listing Details. wild primates. Title wildprimates. Link http//www.wildprimates.com.
http://www.toybox2000.com/directory/view-listing-3185.html
thisPage._location = "/directory/view-listing.asp";
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Contacting Us Advertise Links ... Free Magazines Classifieds Browse Toy Ads Search Toy Ads Place an Ad Ad Control Panel Resources Toy Collectible Directory
Wild Primates
Listing Details Title: Wild Primates Link: http://www.wildprimates.com Category: Main Stuffed Animals
Summary:

Monkeys with velcro hands and feet, as well as a snake and singing plush birds.
Description:
Huggable, lovable, cute plush animal toy monkeys, snakes and birds on line for as little as $10.
CC Network Sites include:
Consulting
Home Medical Job Search Engine Medical Equipment ... Marketing

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