Badri Jawara, The Jakarta Post, Palu, Central
Sulawesi
Belonging to the family of small primates, a tarsier
has a body that measures about 20 centimeters in length
and resembles a rat or a squirrel. Its tail is longer than
its body, and its head is slightly round. The tarsier has
eyes that are round and sharp, with large irises like
those of an owl.
A female tarsier is pregnant for 6 months before giving
birth. Then, like a baby monkey, a baby tarsier is
breast-fed by the mother.
An arboreal animal, it jumps from one tree to another
like a squirrel, using its feet, which resemble those of a
rabbit. A tarsier lives on lizards, grasshoppers, worms,
crickets, flies, mosquitoes and other insects. Like an
owl, it is a nocturnal animal: sleeping during the day and
looking for its food at night.
Tarsiers, which are among the world's smallest
primates, are a protected species. The total tarsier
population in Sulawesi has never been calculated.
But the animal is much easier to spot in Central
Sulawesi than the region's other rare and unique animals,
like deer-hogs and anoa (dwarf buffaloes).
"A census has yet to be conducted on tarsiers and
other animals endemic to this province. One of the reasons
is a lack of both funds and the necessary equipment,"
M.Z. Hudiyono, the head of Central Sulawesi's natural
resources conservation center, said.
Despite its status as a protected species, tarsiers
enjoy less attention and care than other rare species in
Central Sulawesi, like deer-hogs and anoa. Physically,
tarsiers are not attractive enough to be in demand as
pets, so they are generally safe from hunters. The tarsier
population has dropped because its habitat has been
damaged by logging and land clearing.
Compared with other animals, there has been little
research about tarsiers. In Indonesia, a study of this
animal was not conducted until 1994, when the Center for
Primate Studies at the Agricultural Institute of Bogor and
the Indonesian Safari Park in Cisarua teamed up to do some
research on tarsiers.
This 1994 study recommended the captive breeding of
tarsiers because their habitat had been damaged by
logging. Unfortunately, it was found that tarsiers born in
captivity grew very slowly.
There is no definite data about the size of the entire
tarsier population in the world. Perhaps, the number is
larger than current estimates. The results of a number of
studies on the animal shows that there are three species
of tarsiers: Tarsius Bancanus in Sumatra and
Kalimantan, Tarsius Spectrum in Sulawesi,
particularly in the Lore Lindu National Park, and Tarsius
Syrichta, which is found only in the Philippines.
These species are also divided into a number of
sub-species. The largest number of sub-species -- 44 -- is
found in Sulawesi, particularly in Central Sulawesi, said
Hudiyono.
Many years ago, he said, tarsiers could still be found
in Java, particularly in West Java. Today, however, there
are no longer tarsier sightings in Java, and it is thought
the animal has disappeared for good from the island. And
unless logging is controlled, tarsiers will some day just
be animals from the past.
Luckily, in Sulawesi, tarsiers are still enjoying their
freedom in the thick forests. But even here, if forest
clearing is allowed to continue unabated, the tarsier
population will continue to fall.
Sulawesi can today still boast of its diversified rare
flora and fauna. Deer-hogs and anoas are good examples, as
they can be found nowhere else in the world.
Tarsiers are not highly sought after as pets, nor do
farmers view them as crop-destroying pests. This rare
animal attracts the scientists, though.
Hudiyono said the Lore Lindu National Park was the area
with the largest number of tarsiers. In Sumatra and
Kalimantan, there are some tarsiers, but their numbers are
not as high as in Sulawesi.
Research conducted by R.P. Agus Lelana, a veterinary
surgeon at the Center for Primates Studies, concluded that
tarsiers were primates in a transition from simple
primates to a more advanced species. The tarsier begins to
mate at the age of six.
The question is whether this small primate will
eventually become extinct. Of course, the answer lies in
our wisdom in conserving our forests. As long as there are
forests, the tarsier will survive. But once the forests
are gone, this animal will have lost its natural habitat
and will have become extinct.
Today, the Central Sulawesi's Center for Natural
Resources Conservation and the Lore Lindu National Park
are developing a new system to maintain the region's rare
and endemic flora and fauna.
The head of the Lore Lindu National Park, Banjar
Yulianto Laban, called this new system a policy of
"eco-populism". He said that under this system,
the involvement of local people in environmental
conservation was a must.
"Eco-populism is the opposite 'eco-fascism', the
removal of indigenous people from the conservation
concept," he said.