Sulawesi is
one of the biodiversity hotspots due to its location within the
Wallacea.
The 7 endemic macaque species are of extraordinary importance
for the understanding of primate evolution, but little is known about them from the wild.
Due to habitat destruction and poaching, all are threatend by extinction
with crested macaques being critically endangered.
(IUCN Red List 2011).
We thus aim at improving protection of crested macaques through
- building up a biological data base,
- environmental education programs for Indonesian students, rangers and villagers,
- action in the research area to reduce illegal logging and hunting.
We are collaborating with the following organisations:
Tangkoko Conservation Education
Tangkoko Conservation Education (or TCE), a conservation education programme taking place around the Tangkoko-Duasudara
nature reserves and other protected forests of North Sulawesi, aims at giving the survival of this species and their
habitat a long-term perspective. To achieve this goal, we develop education and conservation activities for local
population (especially school interventions for young people), in order to increase their knowledge and awareness
towards the crested macaques and the local biodiversity.