The areaāsĀ Ā are bold and curious, but can be aggressive.
The municipal councilās strategy is to hire humans to imitateĀ Ā and scare off the macaques. The langur isĀ Ā to frighten macaques as they are supposedly ānatural enemiesā. It may work, but not for the reasons itās supposed to.
And the use of professional monkey mimics hints at a much bigger issue: as our cities grow we will only experience more challenges interacting with nature.
On Delhiās parliamentary estate, near where the summit is being held, macaques are known forĀ . They often bite. In the city of Shimla in the Himalayan foothillsĀ Ā by macaques every day in 2014-2018.
Itās good news for G20 visitors, then, that New Delhiās municipal councilĀ Ā to keep macaques at bay. IndiaĀ Ā for this purpose in 2012 because of concerns about their welfare in captivity, where they were often kept chained.
Instead, for the G20 summit, 40 people have beenĀ . Their job will include positioning life-size langur cut-outs around key parts of the city and imitating langur calls to scare off the local macaques.
Why might a monkey-mimic scare a macaque?
Two animals might be called natural enemies if theyĀ Ā for the same foods, space or resources. ButĀ Ā shows this is unlikely to be the case for langurs and macaques.
Rhesus macaques areĀ Ā from Afghanistan to China. They eat a highly varied diet that includes a lot of fruit, plus bark, seeds, buds and animal foods like fish, shellfish, eggs, honeycomb and insects.
Langurs areĀ Ā than rhesus macaques, so might win in a face-off, but are more narrowly distributed. Langurs mainly eat leaves but also consume some fruit, flowers and insects. Their reliance on leaves, however, means that in the wild they would not usually compete with macaques for food.
Macaques and their close relatives thrive in urban environments and rapidly adapt to dealing with people. For example, baboons in Cape TownĀ Ā while Baliās long-tailed macaques haveĀ Ā touristsā stolen phones for food.
Langurs also seem to adapt less readily to urban areas than macaques, but can still be remarkably successful in cities. One group in Dakhineswar, for example, now consistentlyĀ .
Cities have so much food available that urban macaques and langurs probably donāt need to fight for resources. Their ecological differences in the wild also mean they probably donāt have a long-term history of competition.
This is backed up by evidence ofĀ Ā between langurs and macaques in the wild. Juveniles sometimes play together. The adults are less friendly, but do not seem to object to one anotherās presence. This is a far cry from what weād expect reading about langursā supposed aggression towards macaques.
The heart of the problem
The ban on the capture of langurs is, in one way, a step forward for animal welfare. Itās good for conservation too as numbers of all seven langur species native to India are in decline. But this New Delhi approach may be bad for macaque welfare.
If langurs are not inherently scary to macaques, why do the authorities think that monkey-mimicsā calls and cut-outs will deter them? The most likely answer is that those calls and langur cut-outs are themselves intimidating.
New Delhiās monkey mimicsĀ . Their langur calls are described as āā screeches. Langur noises are already loud, and the mimics may make them louder to maximise their effect.
Taking the job seriously means working to cultivate fear so the effect doesnāt wear off. Being chased by a shouting, stick-wielding human is probably much scarier than seeing a langur. The cut-outs may be still and silent, but are associated with these scary humans, who macaques may see placing the cut-outs. These are probably intimidating as reminders of the monkey-mimics themselves.
Human-wildlife conflict is an almost inevitable consequence of human population growth and the expansion of urban areas. There are often negative effects for everyone.
Even if a macaque troop native to New Delhi was forced into urban life by human expansion, itās not as if we can assume the humans had somewhere else to go. Urban expansion, poverty and inequality areĀ , but people are now soĀ Ā that we canāt just stop building cities.
Monkeys harassing visitors to a political summit may seem like a small problem but itās interlinked with theĀ : climate change, inequality, sustainability and globalisation.
There are no easy solutions to human-wildlife conflict. You could argue that the New Delhi case is positive because the people involved are looking for a way to manage a conflict that considers the impact on all the species involved.
It is not, however, a perfect approach. Itās a step in the right direction rather than a solution. Each idea that focuses on improving quality of life for both people and animals brings us closer to living together peacefully.
This article by Dr Isabelle Winder, Senior Lecturer in Zoology, ¶ŗ±ĘÖ±²„ is published under a creative commons licence by . .