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Indonesia busts Russian smuggling drugged orangutan by Staff Writers Denpasar, Indonesia (AFP) March 23, 2019 A Russian tourist attempting to smuggle a drugged orangutan out of Indonesia in his suitcase to bring home and keep as a pet has been arrested in Bali, police said Saturday. Andrei Zhestkov was detained in Denpasar airport late on Friday while passing through a security screening before a planned flight back to Russia. Suspicious officers stopped him and opened his luggage to find a two-year-old male orangutan sleeping inside a rattan basket. "We believe the orangutan was fed allergy pills which caused him to sleep. We found the pills inside the suitcase," Bali conservation agency official I Ketut Catur Marbawa told AFP Saturday. "(Zhestkov) seemed prepared, like he was transporting a baby," he added. The 27-year-old also packed baby formula and blankets for the orangutan, Marbawa said. Police also found two live geckos and five lizards inside the suitcase. Zhestkov told authorities that the protected species was gifted by his friend, another Russian tourist who bought the primate for $3,000 from a street market in Java. He claimed his friend, who has since left Indonesia, convinced him he could bring home the orangutan as a pet. The Russian could face up to five years in prison and $7,000 in fines for smuggling, Marbawa said. Orangutans are a critically endangered species, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature, with only about 100,000 remaining worldwide. Plantation workers and villagers in Indonesia often consider the apes pests and sometimes attack them, while poachers capture the animals to sell as pets. A string of fatal attacks on the apes have been blamed on farmers and hunters. Four Indonesian men were arrested last year over the killing of an orangutan shot some 130 times with an air gun.
Monarch butterflies face hardships on fall migration Washington (UPI) Mar 19, 2019 Monarchs face a wider array of threats than scientists previously realized, according to a new survey of the butterfly's annual southerly migration. Most investigations of declining monarch butterfly numbers have blamed habitat losses among the insect's wintering grounds in Mexico, as well as the decline of milkweed plants throughout the Midwest. But the new study, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggests scientists have underestimated the importance of ... read more
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