From video by Dmitry Sergeyev
For example, the other day, I saw a YouTube video that challenged all previous held records of cuteness. It’s a video of a slow loris – a small, sluggishly moving Asian primate, which is endangered. With its big eyes and tiny ears, it looks innocent and adorable. In the video, the slow loris seems to enjoy getting tickled on a bed. Its arms and face are raised up, and when the tickling stops, it looks down with disappointment at its furry belly.
I watched this at least three times in a row It has almost 2 million views on YouTube. Many commenters proclaim, “I want one!!!!” and ask where they can buy a slow loris.
Looking for more information about the species as pets, I quickly found out that trading these animals internationally is banned by the UN. However, according to a Monga Bay article, this practice continues. Because they are so slow, they’re easy to catch. If an infant is found with a mother, the adult is often killed, and the soon-to-be pet’s teeth are pulled out. Many can die from the stress of the new situation. Researchers who study the slow loris say that the videos and misinformation spread by YouTube can perpetuate this illegal pet trade,
The owner of Sonya, the tickle loving slow loris, says on his YouTube channel that owning a slow loris is legal in Russia, where he lives, and he bought his pet from a “slow loris nursery.” There’s an active debate on in the comments, with some commenters cooing that Sonya looks happy in her human home, and some arguing that the animal is endangered and the pet treatment is “cruel” – perhaps it is “tickle torture.”
The biggest threat to the slow loris is not the pet trade – it’s habitat destruction. Their native forests are being slashed and burned. Which means the slow loris’ grip on survival is already precarious – and being marketed by YouTube as cute pets could eventually be a nail in the species’ coffin.
It’s likely that if the slow loris wasn’t so darn cute, we never would have heard about it. It wouldn’t have made us stop and wonder at our planet’s incredible biodiversity, and lead us to learn more about the challenges facing endangered species. But what is the value of human awareness, versus the consequences for the species itself?
(Visit the Ugly Endangered Things blog to find out that ugly animals are endangered, too!)
Learning to love science. As a producer for EarthSky, Lindsay Patterson interviews some of the world's most fascinating scientists. Through EarthSky, her work content is syndicated on some of the world's top media websites, including USAToday.com and Reuters.com. Patterson is also charged with helping to stay in steady communication with the thousands of scientists who contribute to EarthSky's work of making the voice of science heard in a noisy world. She graduated from Colorado College with a degree in creative writing, and a keen interest in all forms of journalism and media. >>
I posted this video to friends on myspace and facebook a few months ago. I watched that video over and over and wouldn’t shut up about how I totally wanted one. So, I did some research on them as well.
What I found was that they were endangered and trade was illegal, yes.
I also found that there are a lot of programs set up for ones who were taken from their natural habitats and now rely on people within the habitat programs to take care of them since they have limited survival instincts of their own.
Once I researched programs for these endangered species, I found blogs of owners who talk about the love/hate relationship they have with their slow loris’.
Apparently they are VERY needy, and become angry and even physically violent by way of biting if you do not give them the excessive attention they desire. They have unforeseeable tempers like most primate species. This probably explains why poachers remove the offspring’s teeth once captured?
My thoughts…Good thing for their owners, they’re not the size of gorillas who can maul your best friend’s face off and lock themselves in a police cruiser.
Perhaps endangered species remain in their natural habitat, and we accept the surplus of readily available domesticated species who are in danger themselves at our local adopt-a-pet centers and really need loving homes?
They’re still too cute for words though.
nniice animals so beautiful