White-faced Capuchins, mother and child, in Costa Rica. Photo by Sally Kneidel |
Mother orangutan with newborn, refuge in Borneo. Photo by Sally Kneidel |
Primates are special, for me. Most animal mothers don't provide any maternal care whatsoever. Instead, they lay eggs and abandon them, never seeing their own babies. That includes most (but not all) fish, reptiles, amphibians, insects, crustaceans, etc. There are lots of exceptions in those groups, but I'm saying the majority do not provide parental care. That's just they way they've evolved. To compensate for high mortality in their young, they make a lot of eggs. It's a strategy that works, or else they wouldn't still be around.
Birds and mammals are different as a group in that they all provide some degree of maternal (or paternal) care for their young. They invest huge amounts of energy into feeding their young, cleaning them, keeping them warm, protecting them from predators, and so on. Because the young require so much effort, the parents generally have very few offspring.
Long-tailed Macaque sharing food with baby, Sacred Monkey Forest in Bali |
Today, on Mothers Day, I'm celebrating some of the primate mothers and babies I've photographed around the world. These pics were taken in some of my happiest moments - seeing primates doing their own thing in their natural habitats. I am very grateful for those opportunities.
Help protect the world for animals that can't fight back. Work to stop habitat destruction due to global warming. One way to do that is to get involved with Greenpeace (https://www.facebook.com/greenpeacenc). I recommend it. Greenpeace is a hard-working, dedicated group of people I'm proud to volunteer with.
1 comment:
Happy Mother's Day to you, also, Sally!
As humankind destroys habitat and ecosystems, and warms the Earth, the inevitable consequences are in sight. Our species destroys other species on a daily basis, and makes extinction for almost all a likely probability.
Ernst Mayr speculated that our species may have been a biological error, and because of (and in spite of) our higher intelligence, we're doomed to render ourselves extinct in a relatively short amount of (evolutionary) time.
It seems as though we're almost "predestined" to make extinction the final epitaph of every other less readily adaptive species on our planet.
But does it have to happen on our watch? I sure hope not.
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