To tackle trafficking in gibbons, experts probe what drives demand
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“When we first got Joy, we thought he was a monkey,” says Esther. A hunter had come to her village in the Malaysian state of Sabah, on the island of Borneo, to sell wild meat. He showed Esther (not her real name) and her husband a weeks-old primate with long arms, dark skin and large, round eyes. Worried the animal might otherwise be killed for food, she decided to take him home. It was only later that she realized Joy was not a monkey, but a gibbon. Gibbons are small apes, more closely related
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