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Drones and “tranquilizer dart”… end of the run for the macaque escaped from a Scottish zoo

2024-02-01T15:30:33.691Z

Highlights: A Japanese macaque escaped from a Scottish zoo was captured Thursday in a garden where it had come to look for food. Honshu, whose species is also known as the snow monkey, had been tracked using drones with thermal cameras since he managed to escape from his enclosure on Sunday. The Royal Zoological Society of Scotland had assured that this monkey, also nicknamed Kingussie Kong, was not considered dangerous to humans or domestic animals. The young monkey must be examined by a veterinarian before being reunited with the other subadult males in its group.


On Sunday, a Japanese macaque escaped from its enclosure at Highland Wildlife Park in northeast Scotland. The snow monkey was


A chase worthy of the animated films “Madagascar” has ended.

After four days on the run which kept the British in suspense, a Japanese macaque escaped from a Scottish zoo was captured Thursday in a garden where it had come to look for food, the park announced.

Honshu, whose species is also known as the snow monkey, had been tracked using drones with thermal cameras since he managed to escape from his enclosure at Highland Wildlife Park, located in the middle of the mountains and forests of the Cairngorms National Park (northeast Scotland).

Not considered dangerous

“Following a call received just after 10 a.m., our keepers and team of drone pilots went to a private garden where the monkey was feeding in a bird feeder, and they managed to catch him using a tranquilizer dart,” Keith Gilchrist, one of the zoo officials, explained in a statement.

Watch: A monkey was spotted in a man's backyard after it escaped from Highland Wildlife Park in Scotland.

Park officials are using thermal drones to help search for the Japanese macaque, who has been on the run since Sunday.

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The young monkey must be examined by a veterinarian before being reunited with the other subadult males in its group, he said.

Honshu was spotted on Wednesday and tracked for 45 minutes using drones, but it was safer to capture him at a time when he was not roaming free.

The Royal Zoological Society of Scotland had assured that this Japanese macaque, also nicknamed Kingussie Kong, was not considered dangerous to humans or domestic animals, but had however advised against approaching it.

Source: leparis

All tech articles on 2024-02-01

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