A Christmas holiday away from home guarantees an opportunity to explore new landscapes, especially when it's a winter escape to the Caribbean Sea. While the area's islands are famous for their Afro-European cultures and beautiful beaches, they're not as well known for their native mammals. Besides bats and seals, few actually even live there today. However, colonial settlement and exploitation brought several new species that remain today, with the best example being perhaps the vervet monkeys on the island of Saint Kitts.
Native to Africa, the vervet or African green monkey, have existed in feral populations on both Saint Kitts and Barbados for at least 300 years. They either escaped or were released in significant enough numbers over the years to create the viable groups that inhabit these two unique and distant Caribbean islands. It's possible they were pets of early European settlers or tradesmen, maybe sailing aboard the same ships that brought the many slaves to the islands from West Africa.
Any short drive around the island of Saint Kitts gives a tourist a chance to see that humans aren't the only primates that want to call the island paradise home.
Native to Africa, the vervet or African green monkey, have existed in feral populations on both Saint Kitts and Barbados for at least 300 years. They either escaped or were released in significant enough numbers over the years to create the viable groups that inhabit these two unique and distant Caribbean islands. It's possible they were pets of early European settlers or tradesmen, maybe sailing aboard the same ships that brought the many slaves to the islands from West Africa.
Any short drive around the island of Saint Kitts gives a tourist a chance to see that humans aren't the only primates that want to call the island paradise home.
Vervet monkey with discarded sugar cane. |
Vervet monkey chewing on discarded sugar cane. |
Vervet monkey on the "Do not feed the monkeys" sign. |
Vervet monkey and sugar cane. |
Vervet monkey. |
Vervet monkey on Shipwreck Beach in Saint Kitts. |
Comments
Post a Comment