Human-Rhesus Monkey
conflict at Rampur Village under Monohardi Upazila in Narsingdi District of
Bangladesh
M. Farid Ahsan1 & M. Mazbah Uddin2
1,2 Department of Zoology,
University of Chittagong, Chittagong 4331, Bangladesh
1 faridahsan55@yahoo.com (corresponding author), 2 mazbah_cu@yahoo.com
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.11609/JoTT.o3818.5905-8
Editor: Mewa Singh, University of Mysore, Mysuru, India. Date
of publication: 26 June 2014 (online & print)
Manuscript details: Ms #
o3818 | Received 20 October 2013 | Final received 09 May 2014 | Finally
accepted 03 June 2014
Citation: Ahsan,
M.F. & M.M. Uddin (2014). Human-Rhesus
Monkey conflict at Rampur Village under Monohardi Upazila in Narsingdi District of
Bangladesh. Journal of Threatened Taxa 6(6): 5905–5908; http://dx.doi.org/10.11609/JoTT.o3818.5905-8
Copyright: © Ahsan & Uddin 2014. Creative Commons
Attribution 4.0 International License. JoTTallows unrestricted use of this article in any medium, reproduction and
distribution by providing adequate credit to the authors and the source of
publication.
Funding: Self funded by the second
author.
Competing Interest: The
authors declare no competing interests.
Acknowledgements: We thank Dr. Ummay Habiba Khatun, NUFU Fellow and Mr. Nurul Amin, Lab Assistant of the Department of
Zoology, University of Chittagong, Chittagong, for their help. We owe a lot to
the local people of the study area for their support to complete the questionaire survey. MMU is also thankful to his parents,
brothers, sisters all of his friends whose sincere assistance and constant
blessing helps.
For images, table -- click here
Conflicts between humans and non-human primates are recognized as major
issues in conservation of primates. Crop damage caused by primates is one of the most wide spread and common
examples of human-non-human primate conflicts in areas where local people are
mainly subsistence farmers (Hill 1998). Various forms of human-wildlife conflicts occur with various negative
results, including damage to crops and property, habitat destruction, injuries
and death of people and wildlife, and livestock depredation. However, in Asia in general and in
Bangladesh in particular, conflicts between humans and the Rhesus Macaques (Macaca mulattaZimmermann, 1780) are on the increase (IUCN 2009). No published paper is available on the
crop damage by primates in human settlement areas in Bangladesh except Khatun et al. (2013) on Common Langurs(Semnopithecus entellus). Increasing conflict between humans and
Rhesus Macaques is a growing problem for both species in Bangladesh. Many people have been badly scratched,
injured and bitten by Rhesus Monkeys in urban and/or suburban areas such as Bormi (Gazipur), Dhamrai (Dhaka), Charmuguria (Madaripur), Chandpur and Chashnipeer-ermazar (a shrine in Sylhet)
in Bangladesh (M.F. Ahsan pers. obs. 1980–1998; Hasan et al. 2013). Monkeys destroy home gardens, fruit
trees and crops. On the other hand,
monkeys are also beaten, injured and killed by the local people. These interactions may increase the risk
of bidirectional disease transmission (Jones-Engel et al. 2008). The present study deals with the
human-Rhesus monkey conflicts in Rampur Village under KhidirpurUnion Parishad of Monohardi Upazila under NarsingdiDistrict in Bangladesh (24014.226’N & 90043.250’E). The major objectives of the study were
to: (i) know the major food species of Rhesus monkeys
in the study area; (ii) find out the crops damaged by the monkeys; (iii) assess
crop damage; (iv) determine possible causes for human-monkey conflicts; and (v)
point out possible conservation measures in the study area.
Methods: The following methods were employed in
this study:
Group size and composition: One group of Rhesus Macaques was studied
and its group size and composition were recorded from April to September
2012. The macaques were observed
with naked eyes. Four age-sex classes
were recognized to characterize macaques: adult male, adult female, juvenile
and infant (Southwick et al. 1961). The group size was counted once in a month either during morning
(0600–0090 h) and/or late hours of daylight (1500–1800 h)
especially when they were crossing a road and/or open field.
Data collection: Information on human-Rhesus monkey
conflict was collected through filling in a self-prepared questionnaire survey
in Rampur Village (Appendix 1). A
total of 40 persons were randomly selected for the interview. The aims and objectives of the study
were explained to the interviewees to establish rapport and to gain their
confidence for participating in this research. The interviewees were the household
head, the wife of the household head or with resident adults (>18 years), who were willing to
participate in the interview as a representative of the family. Each interview
was conducted in Bengali. It took
10-20 minutes to complete one questionnaire.
Results:
History and composition of the troop: Three groups of Rhesus monkeys were
presently living in and around the study area. An elderly man informed us that during
the 1940s, the British rulers brought a few Rhesus monkeys as pets to Rampur
Village. After the division of
British India, the British rulers left the area and those pet monkeys became
feral. There were 26 animals
in the study group and the composition was four (15.38%) adult males, six
(23.07%) adult females, 10 (38.07%) juveniles and six (23.07%) infants.
Food consumed and crops damaged by the
monkeys: The study group of Rhesus Macaques
consumed plants part of 10 species as food, of which fruits were from eight
species, leaves from three, and inflorescence and seeds from one species each
during the study period (Table 1). The macaques usually roamed behind the police sub-station where they
found shelter in the bushy bamboo area. This area was also least disturbed by humansand it also harboured some seasonal fruit trees. The major crops damaged by the Rhesus
macaques in the study area were: (i) betel leaf
fields (Piper betel), (ii) paddy fields (Oryza sativa), (iii) inflorescence of banana (Musa spp.),(iv) inflorescence of bamboos (Bambusavulgaris), (v) brinjal fields (Solanum melongena),
(vi) potato fields (Solanum tuberosum), (vii) jackfruit (Artocapus heterophyllus) and (viii) inflorescence of
pumpkins (Cucurbita maxima). Eighty percentof the respondents reported that the crop most damaged by the monkeys was betel
(Images 1, 2 & 3); 60% claimed banana as the second highest and 50% said
vegetables were the lowest.
Human-monkey conflicts: Most of the respondents (80%) claimed that
the monkeys have been present in the study area for about 50 years and 20% gave
the estimate as 25 years; at the same time 100% respondents answered that
conflicts between humans and Rhesus were present in the area. Regarding the main cause of conflicts,
70% interviewees mentioned that the scarcity of food for the monkeys in the
area and 30% as habitat loss as the main reasons for conflicts.
In the case of the age group of animals in relation to conflicts with
humans, 70% respondents answered that adult monkeys were responsible and 30%
said juveniles. For mitigation of
conflicts with monkeys, 60% respondents answered striking with sticks, 10%
reported fear and 30% replied as throwing stones.
Reducing conflicts and conservation of
monkeys: Eighty percentof the respondents mentioned that there was no need of translocation of monkeys
whereas 20% claimed the need for translocation of monkeys for reducing
conflicts with humans. They built
fences using jute sticks and wires for protection of their crops and also for
reducing conflicts. Eighty percent of the respondents in the study area opined that
conservation of monkeys is necessary, but 20% opposed it. For conservation purpose, 80%
respondents recommended a reserved space for monkeys and 20% felt they should
be left as present.
Discussion: Rhesus Macaque is largely vegetarian and
its diet includes leaves, flowers, fruits, berries, plants, seeds, grains and
grasses, pond algae, insects, spiders and crabs (Blanford1888–91; Roonwal & Mohnot1977; Ahsan 1984, 1994). In Bangladesh, Ahsan(1984) reported that Rhesus Macaques consumed fruits of 40 different plant
species, leaves of 37 species, flowers of 23 species, buds of 20 species,
stipules of six species, juice of four species, petioles of three species,
young shoot and seed of one species.
Damage to agricultural crops have been reported and have become a
serious management problem involving many wildlife species in different parts
of the world (Chalise 1997 in Nepal; Miah et al. 2001 in Bangladesh). Rhesus Macaques raid jackfruits during
April and May, targeting mature and ripe fruits and sometimes the jackfruits
and pineapples (Annona sativus)
are left scratched and/or half-eaten (Aziz & Feeroz2007) and they also damage bananas (Miah et al.
2001). Conflicts occur when the
monkeys try to snatch food and clothes from the local people and from the
houses; sometimes they become aggressive and bite people, when they are stopped
from taking away food and household items (Devi & Saikia2008). The adult males are more
prone to conflicts with humans than adult females and the conflicts occur when
macaques invade human settlements and damage agricultural crops (Devi & Saikia 2008). Habitat destruction, increasing monkey population and improper waste
disposal are the major causes of conflicts with humans in Assam in India (Devi
& Saikia 2008). In Assam, more than 69% interviewed
population preferred translocation of monkeys and about 22% of them suggested
that sterilization of male monkeys and some methods of birth control such as
immune contraception should be applied for reducing conflicts (Devi & Saikia 2008).
Conclusion: Massive cutting of fruit trees and plantation
of exotic commercial species, which do not supply any food to monkeys, have
compelled the monkeys to enter into human residential areas and crop fields,
and that has created conflicts between humans and monkeys. Some restricted areas (especially
government ‘khas’ lands) may be identified and
planted with some fruiting trees for the survival of monkeys and for reducing
conflicts with humans.
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