Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest

by Wildlife Alliance
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Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest
Help Bring Wildlife Back to Angkor Forest

Project Report | Jan 18, 2023
Playing cupid for Angkor's first wild-born gibbons

By Elisabeth Gish | Grants Manager/Community Conservation Advisor

Chung-ruth (L) as juvenile with family in 2020
Chung-ruth (L) as juvenile with family in 2020

Pileated gibbons were fully extirpated from Angkor before our project began, so we’ve always known that eventually we’d have to play cupid for the first generation of wild-born gibbons. Helping these gibbons to find mates and forge new families is a long-term process and we appreciate the support of donors like you who understand the value of this investment.

Chung-ruth was born in 2017 to the first pair of gibbons released in Angkor, Baray and Saranick. As you may have read in previous reports, Chung-ruth’s older sister Ping-peeung reached adulthood in 2020 and was driven out of the family forest by her parents, as is natural for these territorial apes. To help Ping-peeung find love, we captured her and enclosed her at a different site with a male who had been transferred from the Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Centre. They quickly bonded and were released together a year later, forming Angkor’s fourth gibbon pair.

Chung-ruth has now reached adulthood and his fur is turning from the blond color of all juvenile pileated gibbons to the black of a mature male. Our keepers began to see signs of tension between Chung-ruth and his parents last year. Knowing that they would soon start to drive him away, we decided to capture Chung-ruth and move him to the territory of widowed female gibbon Tevy and her three offspring. In June 2022, we constructed a small catch cage at Baray and Saranick’s site and started placing food into it. The gibbons started going in and out of the cage to collect the food. We knew we would only get one chance to catch Chung-ruth and if we messed it up, he would never enter the cage again.

On October 19,we caught Chung-ruth and transferred him to a large pre-release enclosure at Tevy’s site. Tevy and her original partner, Bayon, were the second pair released in Angkor, but sadly Bayon died in 2021 of unknown causes. The keepers believe all of their offspring are female. All has gone well and the gibbons are interacting. The eldest daughter, Aping, born in 2016, is just a bit older than Chung-ruth. While either she or her mother could potentially be a suitable mate, so far Chung-ruth seems frightened of Tevy and more interested in Aping. A fifth gibbon pair in Angkor is our eventual aim, and it would be fitting if the wild-born offspring of the first two released pairs coupled up! For now, we are still observing and assessing the dynamics and plan to release Chung-ruth there if the gibbons become comfortable with each other and it seems the appropriate course of action.

Creating a whole new gibbon population in Angkor requires longstanding dedication and careful management. Support from generous donors like you enables us continue this important work over the long-run, helping to ensure that when the descendants of Chung-ruth, Ping-Peeung and the rest of Angkor’s first wild-born generation come of age they will have a variety of mates to choose from.

Thank you so much for your support!

Baray inspects the catch cage
Baray inspects the catch cage
Chung-ruth in enclosure being visited by Tevy
Chung-ruth in enclosure being visited by Tevy
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Oct 12, 2022
Langurs, gibbons and otters, oh my!

By Nick Marx | Director, Wildlife Rescue & Care Programs

Jul 3, 2022
Unauthorized gibbon release averted!

By Elisabeth Gish | Project Leader

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Organization Information

Wildlife Alliance

Location: New York, NY - USA
Website:
Facebook: Facebook Page
Twitter: @WildlifeRescue
Project Leader:
Elisabeth Gish
Phnom Penh , Cambodia

Funded Project!

Combined with other sources of funding, this project raised enough money to fund the outlined activities and is no longer accepting donations.
   

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