That cute
lemur selfie you shared may be fueling the illegal pet trade in Madagascar
Date: January 28, 2019
Source: Duke University
Cats and
dogs aren't the only cute animals that rule the internet. We also coo over a
video of someone snuggling a tiger cub, feeding a sloth or tickling a loris.
Now, a new
study of Twitter activity shows that viral videos of seemingly cuddly exotic
animals can have a dark side too -- by fueling demand for them as pets.
The study
focused on a 2016 viral video of a ring-tailed lemur demanding back scratches
from two boys in a village in Madagascar. Each time the kids take a break, the
lemur turns toward them and points to a spot on its back as if begging for
more.
Reactions
ranged from "so sweet" and "awwww-cute" to "freaking
adorable." The video quickly made the rounds on the internet, and within a
week the original Facebook post had 20 million views.
Researchers
downloaded and analyzed nearly 14,000 tweets mentioning pet or captive lemurs
over an 18-week period before and after this video appeared online. As the
video was liked and shared, the volume of tweets saying things like "I
want a pet lemur" and "where can I find one?" more than doubled.
Google and
YouTube searches for the phrase "pet lemur" also spiked in the weeks
after the video went viral, compared with other times between 2013 and 2018.
None of the
tweets revealed anyone actually buying or selling lemurs on Twitter. But the
researchers worry such incidents could encourage would-be wildlife traffickers,
particularly in Madagascar, the only place where the endangered primates live
in the wild.
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