The animal was handed over by a resident in Hai Phong city, who found the gibbon on his farm and contacted the park’s Endangered Primate Rescue Centre (EPRC) and Hai Phong City’s Forest Protection Department.

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The yellow-cheeked gibbon (Nomascus gabriellae) that the Cuc Phuong National Park has rescued

A representative of the park said that last month, it also rescued a rare gibbon from Hai Phong city.

Currently, 29 endangered primates are cared for at the park’s EPRC - a non-profit project dedicated to the rescue, rehabilitation, breeding, research, and conservation of Vietnam’s endangered and critically endangered primate species. Established in 1993, through collaboration between the Frankfurt Zoological Society and the Cuc Phuong National Park, the center is presently managed under the umbrella of the Vietnam Primate Conservation Program, jointly operated by the Zoo Leipzig and the Cuc Phuong National Park.

Currently, the program conserves over 180 primates representing 14 endangered and rare species in Vietnam. Of those, 12 species have been successfully bred with a total of 382 individuals. Of these, three species have bred for the first time in captivity.

The program has also released 154 individuals into the wild.

Source: VNA