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Having a Slow Loris as a pet should be illegal!






Saving the slow loris















The slow loris in Indonesia is under serious threat of extinction as a result of habitat loss and the illegal trade for pets and for traditional medicine. The Javan slow loris is included in the category of ‘endangered’ species on the IUCN Red List and named as one of the 25 most endangered primates in the world.










About the slow loris:
























Too cute to live? The endangered slow loris






The slow loris is a small nocturnal primate: its Latin name Nycticebus means ‘night monkey.’ Slow lorises sleep all day and become active at night when they hunt for food.













They measure between 240 and 380 mm in length and typically weigh less than 2 kg. Lorises have low reproductive rates, usually giving birth to single offspring after a long gestation period and with long intervals in between. They have a lifespan of up to 20 years.










Slow lorises are omnivorous: their diet includes fruit, tree sap and small animals such as lizards, insects, birds and bird eggs. They move stealthily towards live prey but, once within striking range, they pounce quickly and efficiently.










To protect itself the slow loris often covers its head with both arms. This position allows the loris to take in the toxin produced by a gland on its elbow. With this toxin, the slow loris bite can cause swelling, fever and pain and can be deadly for humans who suffer allergic reactions and anaphylactic shock. Slow lorises are the only toxic primates in the world.










Threats to the survival of the slow loris:










The illegal wildlife trade is believed to be an even bigger threat to the slow loris’s survival than habitat loss. Their huge brown eyes and soft fur make these small timid creatures immensely popular as pets.



















Thousands of slow lorises are poached from the wild and illegally sold as pets or for use in traditional medicine. Domestic and international trade takes place in various ways, from open selling of slow lorises on roadsides to smuggling them in poorly ventilated, overcrowded cages. In Indonesia slow lorises are sold on the street or in traditional animal markets, as well as in city malls. Although both Indonesian and international laws ban the trade in slow lorises, the illegal wildlife trade is flourishing.










These shy little animals suffer terrible stress in the animal markets where they are dumped in small cramped cages and exposed to broad daylight and baking heat. Their teeth are often cut off with nail clippers to protect the handler from the loris’s toxic bite. This painful mutilation causes terrible infections, often leading to a slow and painful death. Many slow lorises die before they have been sold.


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