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Video of an endangered Gibbon used to entertain tourists on Chaweng Beach in Koh Samui, Thailand.


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Sadly, these captured Gibbons have a very short “working life.” When they get to age 6 or 7, they develop canine teeth and often become more aggressive. Once they are no longer cute and compliant, many are killed.
 
Also, gibbons do not breed in captivity. Which means that this baby gibbon was poached from the wild (or bought on the black market).
 
This it the same beach where a slow loris was found with teeth ripped out so tourists could take selfies in 2016:
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