Jungle Animal Hospital Natural World


Jungle Animal Hospital

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A dedicated team is heading deep

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into the Central American rainforest.

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Their cargo is precious, a troop of orphaned spider monkeys.

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Their mission is simple - to return the monkeys to where they belong.

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It's all in a day's work for the staff at the jungle animal hospital.

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Here the wards are full of rescued animals,

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all hoping for a chance of freedom.

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The day-to-day tasks are endless,

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the highs and lows exhausting and the unexpected never surprising.

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We try to do our best.

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We need to make sure that these animals have a second chance

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because they do deserve it.

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What is certain is that the hospital's vets and their team

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will work tirelessly to help every patient

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that comes through their doors.

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It takes a lot of time and effort to do it

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but that's what we're here for

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because that one little animal needs help.

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This is animal rehab, jungle style.

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A daily battle to save lives in

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Guatemala's busiest Rescue Centre.

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There's a special delivery for the vets at ARCAS Rescue Centre.

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Animals find their way here from all over Guatemala,

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most of them victims of the illegal pet trade.

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With over 700 animals of all shapes and sizes,

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the centre is already at full capacity,

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but they try to turn no-one away.

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-Can you give me a hand?

-Yep.

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The latest arrival is just one month old.

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We've got a baby spider monkey here,

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given up to the authorities in Guatemala City.

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They sent her up to us.

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People keeping monkeys as pets is sadly quite common.

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MONKEY SCREECHES

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The only way to get a baby monkey like her is to kill the mother

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and then keep this little baby orphan in a human environment.

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MONKEY SCREECHES

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Alejandro Morales has dedicated his life to saving animals

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and trained as a vet so that he could make a difference.

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MONKEY SCREECHES

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Right, yeah, bring him in.

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His partner Anna Bryant is a zoologist from New Zealand

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and takes care of all the young orphaned animals

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that come through the door.

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There's a very traumatic time for them.

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They've been ripped away from their mother and they've been

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stuck in a box or in a car

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for God knows how long so it's for the best that she's here now.

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The baby monkey is now at the start of a five-year journey through the

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Rescue Centre which will culminate with her release back into the wild.

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After a period in quarantine, she will join up with other

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rescued spider monkeys to form their own troop.

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Here she will hopefully find a mate and go on to rear her own young.

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Eventually her troop will be moved into a much larger enclosure

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within the forest.

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This will be the final stage of their rehabilitation.

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This troop has been living here for over a year

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and all being well, is due for release in just three months' time.

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They should now have learned to recognise their natural food

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and develop the climbing skills they need to move around the canopy.

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It's now crunch time for these monkeys.

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Anna is carrying out a final study to see if they're ready.

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There's one monkey that Anna is most worried about,

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an adult male called Bruce.

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He separates himself away from the group

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and doesn't interact as well as the other ones do.

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Unfortunately, he's the underdog of the group, really, which does

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make you feel a bit more attached to him in some respects

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because he is such a distinctive looking monkey as well as

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we've obviously had a lot of focus on him.

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Bruce is now seven years old and this is his only chance for release,

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but he must learn to socialise more if he is to survive in the wild.

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Over the coming weeks, Anna will be keeping a close eye on his progress.

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The jungles of Central America

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are among the most important in the world.

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Once the centre of a lost civilisation,

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this vast tract of wilderness is known as the Maya Forest,

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stretching from Guatemala through Belize into Mexico.

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It's home to over 4,000 species,

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including some of the jungle's most celebrated animals.

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It's one of the largest tropical rainforests

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that are left in the world.

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When you get on top of the canopy, it's just this green carpet

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that extends for kilometres and kilometres

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and there's nothing around you but forest.

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It's immense but it's also so frail and so threatened.

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In the last 30 years, huge areas of land across

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Central and South America have been cleared for agriculture.

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As a result, some of the region's most precious wildlife

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is now under threat.

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And one of the most iconic species is the scarlet macaw.

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These magnificent birds were once a common sight

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but the subspecies found here in Guatemala is rapidly disappearing.

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Scientists believe there are now fewer than

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300 individuals left in the wild.

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This year the team at the Rescue Centre are planning to make history

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by releasing a group of their own captive-bred macaws

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to boost the wild population.

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With these birds in such danger,

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each new chick is extremely precious.

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We're looking at a two, three-day baby...

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It's this little beautiful thing

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and it's got a full crop

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so that means the parents are feeding him.

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It looks a very, very healthy three-day-old baby.

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There's no words to describe how important

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each one of these animals is.

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And this is how it all begins.

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Once it's fledged, this chick will eventually join those waiting

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to be released into the forest.

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At the Mammal Quarantine Department, the centre's newest spider monkey

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is settling in well.

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She's just starting to feed from a bottle.

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Anna needs to form a bond so she can care for her

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but she also has to be careful not to get too attached.

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We obviously want them to trust us enough

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for us to be able to feed them

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and for us to help them develop and for them to gain weight

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and to not be too stressed

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but we also don't want them to be too used to us.

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If she was with her mother, she'd have a lot more contact.

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Her mother would carry her constantly with it.

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If we were to do that, we probably wouldn't be able to release her

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in the long-run, so it's a fine line that we have to tread.

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But it's a very...

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..very heart-warming moment when they do look at you like that.

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It's very cool.

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The baby monkey has been given a teddy bear as a surrogate mother.

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She will remain in quarantine for the next three months.

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With so many mouths to feed, the work at the centre goes on

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seven days a week, all year round.

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Most of the feeding and cleaning is done by local staff

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and volunteers from all over the world,

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while the vets deal with the emergencies and the clinic.

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It's a never-ending conveyor belt of rescued animals of all shapes

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and sizes, revealing the richness of the Guatemalan jungle...

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..but also the shocking extent of the pet trade.

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The animals are treated by the vets then nursed back to full health

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before hopefully being returned to the wild.

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THEY SPEAK SPANISH

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Some patients are deemed fit for immediate release...

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..and come in and go out the door on the same day.

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The centre also attracts wild visitors

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from all over the forest, drawn in by the prospect of a free meal.

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A flock of black vultures are

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regular diners at the crocodile pool,

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risking life and limb for a piece of fresh chicken.

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VULTURE SQUAWKS

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Even the ants are on the take,

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making sure nothing goes to waste.

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Occasionally, some of these wild animals come to the vet's attention.

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MONKEY GROWLS

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A family of howler monkeys visits the centre every day,

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helping themselves to leftovers.

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Alejandro has noticed the baby has a large growth on its neck,

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which could become serious unless treated.

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He wouldn't normally interfere

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but it's impossible for him to ignore it.

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It's a good thing that we caught him at the time that we did

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cos the bigger that injury gets, the more of a threat it is to him.

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He could get a big infection, he could get like a big

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mass on his neck and that can put some pressure on his spine

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and then his nerves and you don't want a monkey with problems

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with their nerves because it could fall down from the tree.

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MONKEY SCREECHES

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This is a botfly larva.

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They're fairly common in wild monkeys

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but could be fatal for a baby.

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They become very, very dangerous when they are very, very big

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so that's why we intervene.

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We usually don't intervene in this kind of things.

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MONKEY SQUEALS

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We'll have to make sure that the wound is cleansed

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so that he can go back out...

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..and that there is no secondary infection.

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MONKEY SQUEALS

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THEY SPEAK SPANISH

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The baby howler monkey is finally reunited with his mother...

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..and should make a speedy recovery.

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MONKEY CHATTERS

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The spider monkey troop now has just six weeks left

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before their planned release.

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It's breakfast time,

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a raucous occasion which brings them all together.

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All except Bruce.

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Bruce is still not mixing with the rest of the troop

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but that's not the only problem.

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He's also spending too much time on the ground,

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picking up any food that falls from above.

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And more worrying still, having spent his early life as a pet,

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Bruce has never developed a fear of humans.

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He's very used to people.

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He'll come close to the fence, he'll sit beside us.

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He doesn't want to be afraid of us and so it's very, very difficult

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to be able to try and get him to understand that he needs to be.

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He also has taken to sleeping on the ground, under the bushes.

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I do feel a little bit sorry for him because he's come so far

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and he's been given this chance to be able to go back into the wild.

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And so, it's very, very difficult to see a monkey that's almost there,

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that's got the chance to almost be free, to not being able to

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exhibit the right behaviour.

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Out in the wild,

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spider monkeys have to watch out for a wide range of predators.

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So they're naturally very cautious.

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They spend over 90% of their life in the canopy

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and rarely go down to the forest floor.

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If they do, it's for the shortest possible time.

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One of their greatest enemies is the jaguar, the jungle's top predator.

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To survive in the wild,

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spider monkeys need to be on their guard at all times.

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Bruce must spend more time up in the trees,

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if he is to stand a chance of being released.

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Having tried everything to help him, Anna is now taking extreme measures.

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FIRECRACKER BANGS

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She's using firecrackers to scare Bruce off the ground.

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It's a very loud noise, a very sharp noise

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and they get scared and they will therefore associate

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being on the ground with bad things, with negative things.

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FIRECRACKER BANGS

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We want to give them the best possible chance and in order

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to do that, they need to be up in the trees for the majority

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of their time.

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Bruce won't be set free with the rest of the troop

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unless he can change his behaviour.

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At the clinic, an unusual patient has been brought in

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with a nasty fracture.

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We received a baby northern potoo, which is a very, very rare bird.

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Potoos are secretive nocturnal birds,

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closely related to nightjars.

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This is the only one they've ever seen in the clinic.

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He has a broken leg so we are going to anaesthetise him

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and see if we can repair his leg.

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With so many different shaped animals to treat,

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the vets often have to improvise on the spot.

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No-one makes standard gas masks for baby northern potoos.

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We have a makeshift one that we use with recycled materials.

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He's quite young.

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This species don't really do well in captivity

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so we'll do as little intervention, as little time with us as possible.

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Push him, push him.

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The potoo will not survive in the wild with a broken leg

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as he can't forage for his own food.

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His only chance is immediate surgery.

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This is the first time Alejandro has ever had to operate

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on a potoo and it will require all his skill as a vet.

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This is very, very painful.

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Once the potoo is safely asleep,

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Alejandro's first job is to try to straighten the broken bone.

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Right now it's in line and it's in a good position.

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Keep the leg at that height.

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Can you turn off the light, please?

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Thank you.

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The operation has worked

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but the potoo can't be released until he's fully healed.

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It's not the most stable of fractures

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but it will hold, it will hold and

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now all we need to do is find out what we're meant to feed him.

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Alejandro is mixing up a cocktail of fruit and flies

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to tempt the potoo into eating.

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If you touch their beak, they open.

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They're very, very big-mouthed.

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Up to now I don't think that he's liking what we're feeding him

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because he's not swallowing completely.

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So we're going to keep trying

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because there's really not much we can do but try.

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We need to make him eat.

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He has to eat because if he doesn't eat, he's not going to get better

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from his fracture and we're not going to be able to release him.

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The next 24 hours will be critical for the potoo.

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And it's also a very important day for the scarlet macaws.

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They're taking a major step closer to freedom.

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THEY SPEAK SPANISH

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Today, nine of these birds are being selected for release.

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BIRDS SQUAWK

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The vets need to take a close look at each individual

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but they have to catch them first.

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BIRDS SQUAWK

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It's a stressful time for both staff and macaws

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but it's unavoidable if they're to move onto the next phase.

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BIRDS SQUAWK

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It is our job to catch them

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right now in order to get a good health assessment and to get

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everything that we need in order for this process

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to actually move forward.

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To avoid any risk to the wild population,

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the birds must first be screened for diseases.

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As each individual is so precious,

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they must be handled with extreme care.

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They are actually quite dangerous animals.

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We need to be very careful, especially about the beak,

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because these guys break nuts for a living.

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They can break a nut about the size of our fist

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so it has to be restrained with enough technique to make sure

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that the animal is not injured and you don't get injured as well.

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The driving force behind the macaw project

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is senior vet Fernando Martinez,

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Director of the Rescue Centre.

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IN SPANISH:

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For Fernando, the release is the fulfilment

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of his lifetime's ambition.

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BIRDS SQUAWK

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The nine chosen macaws are now going to live in a much larger enclosure.

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Their new home is 40 metres long and will give them space to fly.

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This is the macaws' final cage before they're set free.

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It's really cool to be able to see them fly out

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and be in a cage that has trees in it.

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It's really, really important for them

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at this stage to build up their muscle development.

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We need to give them power of flight.

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They know how to fly but we need to give them

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that capacity to fly long distances, having their wings completely

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spread out and being able to just have that exercise.

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If all goes well,

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in a matter of weeks these will be the first captive-bred

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scarlet macaws ever to be released into the Guatemalan rainforest.

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It's 6am on a Sunday morning and

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Alejandro is worried about the potoo,

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so he's heading into the clinic.

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Today is my day off but the potoo

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needs to be fed and he's very weak so I'm not having anyone else

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feed him so I'm coming in

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in the morning and the afternoon to feed him.

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Even after ten years' experience and hundreds of patients,

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some animals hit a soft spot.

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And Alejandro has started having dreams about the potoo.

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Early this morning, I dreamt about him being dead.

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So the first thing I do, which is grab my bicycle

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and rode to work to make sure that he was OK...

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..as it was quite a hideous dream,

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I actually haven't had that for a while.

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As the hours pass, Alejandro stays in the clinic

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by the potoo's side to keep watch.

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The potoo still hasn't gained any weight

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and Alejandro is taking it personally.

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Right now it's just give him some fluids...

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..and I hope that he can actually have a bit of fight in him.

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And I can give him a hand in getting back to full strength,

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the way he was a few days ago.

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You could just see him fade little by little

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and some animals do get to you for the most unexpected reasons...

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..and it was just heartbreaking.

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Despite all Alejandro's efforts, the potoo doesn't make it.

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Life in the forest is fragile

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and fresh casualties arrive every day.

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The staff here fight for every life

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but the battle against the illegal pet trade is never-ending.

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Wildlife trafficking often takes place under the cover of darkness.

0:29:180:29:21

One of the most common methods for smuggling animals out

0:29:250:29:28

of the forest is by public transport.

0:29:280:29:30

The vets from the Rescue Centre are trying to combat the trade

0:29:340:29:38

by working with the authorities at checkpoints

0:29:380:29:40

on the main routes out of the jungle.

0:29:400:29:42

It is breeding season for all the parrots and some other

0:29:520:29:55

mammals as well, so there is a very high chance that a lot of little

0:29:550:29:59

baby orphans that have been taken away from their mothers or

0:29:590:30:02

away from their nests are going to be found

0:30:020:30:04

in one of these vehicles tonight.

0:30:040:30:06

As the operation goes on, the officers found more

0:30:100:30:13

and more baby parrots.

0:30:130:30:15

This batch were hidden in the hold of the bus.

0:30:160:30:19

A young couple is apprehended and taken into custody.

0:30:210:30:25

This kind of scenario is quite common for someone to get

0:30:260:30:29

a bird into their bag and try to transport it in a bus

0:30:290:30:32

because that's easy money for them, illegal easy money.

0:30:320:30:35

It's our job to protect the animal.

0:30:380:30:40

The animal now becomes evidence

0:30:400:30:42

and that evidence is under our care.

0:30:420:30:43

These baby parrots are the lucky ones.

0:30:470:30:50

They'll be given the best possible chance to be free again.

0:30:520:30:55

Whenever new patients arrive at the Rescue Centre,

0:31:010:31:04

the first job is to get them checked in.

0:31:040:31:06

THEY SPEAK SPANISH

0:31:100:31:13

The priority for now is to rehydrate and feed these baby parrots

0:31:130:31:17

after their traumatic journey out of the jungle.

0:31:170:31:19

As long as we can undo their malnutrition,

0:31:210:31:25

we will have a very good chance of success with these guys.

0:31:250:31:28

We can still teach them how to be proper parrots

0:31:280:31:32

and not have to depend on humans.

0:31:320:31:34

In one month alone, the centre can receive over 100 baby parrots.

0:31:350:31:40

We do tend to get a lot of baby parrots in. It's the season

0:31:430:31:45

when they start hatching

0:31:450:31:47

and that's a time when it's very easy for people to grab them.

0:31:470:31:51

It's really, really sad and it's unfortunately quite common.

0:31:510:31:54

Most baby parrots never even make it to market.

0:31:550:31:59

The vast majority die en route.

0:31:590:32:01

The way the people carry these animals is completely inhumane.

0:32:030:32:05

They're wrapped up in plastic bags.

0:32:050:32:07

They usually can't breathe and that is why

0:32:070:32:09

there's a lot of fatalities.

0:32:090:32:11

Up to 70%, 80% of the animals die in transit in order for people

0:32:110:32:16

to please themselves and that is...

0:32:160:32:18

..that's just, it just makes you angry.

0:32:210:32:23

If all goes well, in two years' time these baby parrots will be

0:32:260:32:30

returned to the forest.

0:32:300:32:31

THEY HONK QUIETLY

0:32:310:32:35

THEY CONTINUE HONKING

0:32:350:32:42

But not every rescued animal has the chance to go back to the wild.

0:32:420:32:46

A pet puma has just been confiscated from a family home

0:32:490:32:53

and he will now stay here for the rest of his life.

0:32:530:32:58

Unfortunately we won't be able to release him.

0:32:580:33:00

He would normally be taught by his mother how to hunt properly

0:33:000:33:03

and that's been taken away from him.

0:33:030:33:06

Also, very, very sadly, a lot of people's first response

0:33:070:33:11

on seeing a puma is to shoot them.

0:33:110:33:13

We can't put him back into a situation like that, it's not fair.

0:33:130:33:16

The Rescue Centre is also home to two orphaned jaguars.

0:33:220:33:26

They were confiscated as pet cubs

0:33:300:33:32

and never learned to hunt from their mother.

0:33:320:33:34

They would not survive in the forest.

0:33:370:33:40

All the vets can do is give them food

0:33:400:33:44

and a safe place to live out their days.

0:33:440:33:47

Anna's Mammal Quarantine Department is filling up quickly.

0:34:070:34:11

Her latest patient is a baby grey fox found alone in the jungle.

0:34:140:34:18

He'll now stay under Anna's care for the next six months

0:34:210:34:25

until he's old enough to fend for himself.

0:34:250:34:27

He's eating incredibly well, which is great.

0:34:290:34:32

I just gave him a little bit of a run round, obviously he needs a bit

0:34:320:34:35

of exercise as well.

0:34:350:34:36

But the less handling that we do of him, the better

0:34:360:34:39

and he's still quite aggressive and still a little bit scared

0:34:390:34:42

so it looks good for him being able to be released in the future.

0:34:420:34:46

Working with baby spider monkeys brings its own challenges.

0:34:480:34:52

They're highly social animals in constant need of attention.

0:34:530:34:57

Their cages are quite close together and she's wanting to grab

0:34:580:35:02

and so what spider monkeys do is

0:35:020:35:03

when they can't reach with their hands,

0:35:030:35:06

they'll use their tail, which is what she's doing quite well.

0:35:060:35:08

No matter how hard Anna tries not to get attached,

0:35:140:35:17

the spider monkeys sometimes prove impossible to ignore.

0:35:170:35:21

The troop of spider monkeys due for release is

0:35:300:35:33

now on the final countdown to freedom.

0:35:330:35:35

Bruce has started to mend his ways.

0:35:370:35:41

He's spending more time up in the trees

0:35:410:35:43

interacting with the rest of the troop.

0:35:430:35:45

Today, his fate will be decided.

0:35:470:35:50

Over the last month or so he's definitely shown some improvements,

0:35:510:35:55

interacting with the young babies as well as with the males.

0:35:550:35:58

It's still unsure as to whether or not he will be able to be released.

0:35:580:36:02

Luckily, it's not my decision.

0:36:020:36:04

But we'll see how it goes and we'll be able to hopefully release him.

0:36:040:36:08

The only alternative for Bruce is to spend the rest of his life

0:36:090:36:12

alone in captivity.

0:36:120:36:14

So after much deliberation, the vets finally give Bruce

0:36:150:36:19

the go-ahead for release.

0:36:190:36:20

The next challenge is to capture the whole troop

0:36:240:36:27

and attach radio collars so they can be tracked in the wild.

0:36:270:36:31

Now that they've been trained to avoid people, this won't be easy.

0:36:320:36:36

Alejandro needs to set a trap.

0:36:380:36:41

THEY SPEAK SPANISH

0:36:410:36:44

They're going to have some food inside.

0:36:480:36:50

And, ideally, that will lure them in.

0:36:500:36:54

And when they try to get out, they're going to pull this rope

0:36:540:36:57

and that rope will close the door.

0:36:570:36:59

The last thing that they'll remember from people is that

0:36:590:37:02

if people feed them, they get trapped.

0:37:020:37:05

That is the last image of people that they will have

0:37:050:37:08

and it's a good thing because they're meant to stay away from us.

0:37:080:37:12

The spider monkeys seem to know something is not quite right.

0:37:230:37:27

But the food is irresistible.

0:37:280:37:30

The alpha male is the first to try it.

0:37:310:37:33

He gets away scot-free.

0:37:350:37:36

Now the others follow his lead.

0:37:400:37:42

The trap has sprung and a young mother and her baby are caught.

0:37:540:37:58

She instantly starts searching for the way out.

0:38:000:38:03

It's not long before she finds it.

0:38:100:38:12

Alejandro's trap has failed.

0:38:190:38:23

They're very smart, they're problem solvers.

0:38:230:38:25

They have found one of the weak spots of the enclosure already.

0:38:250:38:29

We've been training them for years to outsmart us

0:38:290:38:31

and now we need to outsmart them again.

0:38:310:38:33

THEY CHATTER

0:38:420:38:46

This time the trap works and the first two monkeys are captured.

0:38:460:38:50

Alejandro now has to enter the cage to administer a sedative.

0:38:520:38:55

This is something no-one on the team enjoys but it has to be done

0:38:570:39:01

so the monkeys can be given a full health check before release.

0:39:010:39:06

The final captures are tough psychologically on them and on us

0:39:100:39:14

because as much as we know that it's the right thing to do,

0:39:140:39:18

it's very stressful for them and you can see the suffering

0:39:180:39:21

and their fear in their eyes.

0:39:210:39:23

The toughest bit is for them to

0:39:230:39:26

not understand how much we love them.

0:39:260:39:29

As the remaining members of the troop get caught,

0:39:370:39:40

there is one monkey who is refusing to cooperate.

0:39:400:39:43

Bruce.

0:39:450:39:47

Having finally learned to stay up in the trees away from people,

0:39:480:39:52

he's now in no rush to come down.

0:39:520:39:54

Eventually, Bruce also succumbs to temptation.

0:40:000:40:04

MONKEY CHATTERS

0:40:140:40:16

The troop are leaving their enclosure for the last time.

0:40:310:40:34

After the health check, they are fitted with radio collars

0:40:370:40:40

so they can be monitored post-release.

0:40:400:40:42

The decision to let Bruce go was a difficult one

0:40:450:40:48

as there are still doubts over whether he's ready.

0:40:480:40:52

He has been interacting with the juveniles

0:40:530:40:56

and doing a lot of positive things but there's still a slight concern.

0:40:560:41:00

We do everything we can to give them a fighting shot but

0:41:000:41:04

it's entirely up to them once those cages are no more in their life.

0:41:040:41:08

It's D-Day for Bruce and the rest of the troop.

0:41:190:41:21

Though they don't yet know it, they're on their way

0:41:230:41:26

back to the wild.

0:41:260:41:27

They're heading into Rio Azul National Park

0:41:370:41:40

as far away from people as possible.

0:41:400:41:42

But it's a 15-hour drive through challenging terrain.

0:41:440:41:47

Across their range, spider monkeys have declined

0:42:180:42:21

by over 50% in the last 45 years.

0:42:210:42:24

This is now the eighth troop to be released by the Rescue Centre

0:42:260:42:30

and will help boost the wild population.

0:42:300:42:32

It's been a very long journey with them, with various ups and downs.

0:42:370:42:41

These are monkeys that have had an awful start to life.

0:42:430:42:46

They've been ripped away from their mothers, from their families and now

0:42:460:42:49

here they all are, so you couldn't ask for anything really better.

0:42:490:42:53

They don't know what's going on.

0:42:540:42:56

They're just looking through what they can see through the cages.

0:42:560:42:59

But it's finally sinking in now that we're only minutes

0:43:000:43:04

away from letting them out.

0:43:040:43:05

It's the last minutes that they're going to be in a cage

0:43:060:43:09

for the rest of their lives.

0:43:090:43:10

We've done pretty much everything we can and this is the culmination

0:43:170:43:23

of it and there's not much more than Godspeed and good luck monkeys.

0:43:230:43:28

As the troop starts to explore their new world,

0:44:250:44:28

there's one monkeys who's refusing to come out.

0:44:280:44:32

Bruce.

0:44:320:44:33

He's not quite ready to head into the wild

0:44:350:44:38

and needs a bit of encouragement to leave the safety of his cage.

0:44:380:44:41

Seeing them up there, that's where they're meant to be.

0:45:300:45:33

So it couldn't be a nicer feeling, to be honest.

0:45:330:45:36

It's one of those things that you kind of dream about that you

0:45:420:45:45

never actually think is going to happen and it's...

0:45:450:45:48

SHE SOBS

0:45:480:45:53

..it's really heavy. It doesn't look like it's heavy.

0:45:530:45:57

It's just incredible. I can't stop smiling.

0:45:570:46:01

HE SIGHS

0:46:010:46:03

Over the next few months, some of the team will stay in the forest

0:46:050:46:09

to follow the monkeys' progress.

0:46:090:46:11

After that, they're on their own.

0:46:110:46:14

At the Rescue Centre,

0:46:400:46:41

there are still hundreds of hungry mouths to feed.

0:46:410:46:44

And there are more arriving every day.

0:46:460:46:48

The latest inpatients are a family of baby toucans who have

0:46:530:46:57

fallen from their nest.

0:46:570:46:59

These prehistoric-looking creatures would never have survived

0:46:590:47:03

alone in the jungle.

0:47:030:47:04

But now they will be hand-reared and eventually set free.

0:47:050:47:09

In the Mammal Quarantine Department, the centre's youngest spider monkey

0:47:120:47:16

is starting on the first stage of her training -

0:47:160:47:19

learning how to climb.

0:47:190:47:21

It's very important that she learns her coordination

0:47:210:47:26

and learns how to hold on to trees.

0:47:260:47:30

She doesn't quite know what to do with all her arms and legs

0:47:300:47:33

and that she has a tail to use,

0:47:330:47:35

but she'll develop and in no time

0:47:350:47:37

she'll be playing on this all the time

0:47:370:47:39

and it will be a lot more difficult to get her off it.

0:47:390:47:42

MONKEY SQUEAKS

0:47:440:47:46

The staff at the Rescue Centre don't just deal with

0:47:590:48:01

the victims of the pet trade.

0:48:010:48:03

They also try to tackle its causes.

0:48:040:48:07

-ALL: Hola!

-Hola.

0:48:080:48:10

Bienvenidos.

0:48:100:48:12

Groups of local schoolchildren are brought into the centre to

0:48:130:48:16

meet the animals

0:48:160:48:17

and to see the impacts of the illegal trade for themselves.

0:48:170:48:21

IN SPANISH:

0:48:230:48:27

Carlos grew up in this area and wants the next generation to

0:48:370:48:40

learn to value the unique wildlife around them.

0:48:400:48:43

The hope is that if the children understand the suffering

0:49:100:49:13

caused by the pet trade, then demand may eventually dry up.

0:49:130:49:17

The future of Guatemala's wildlife depends on changing the

0:49:340:49:37

hearts and minds of the next generation.

0:49:370:49:40

It may be a gradual process,

0:49:440:49:46

but Alejandro believes it's beginning to work.

0:49:460:49:49

There's a lot of awareness.

0:49:520:49:53

There's a lot of good humans trying to fight the fight.

0:49:530:49:57

We're just hoping that what we do is enough to

0:49:570:50:02

inspire other people to do what they can.

0:50:020:50:04

Six weeks after the spider monkey release, the radio tracking team

0:50:120:50:16

bring the first reports from the forest

0:50:160:50:18

with news of the monkeys' progress.

0:50:180:50:20

We've got good news and we've got bad news.

0:50:230:50:25

Good news is that 11 monkeys actually have made it.

0:50:250:50:29

It's over a month now and they're doing fantastically well.

0:50:290:50:32

Sadly, two collars were retrieved next to two dead monkeys.

0:50:320:50:37

One of the monkeys that died was Bruce.

0:50:390:50:42

They're not sure how he died, they just found him on the floor.

0:50:440:50:47

That it could have just been another monkey group attacked him

0:50:470:50:50

and he didn't have the protection of the rest of the group.

0:50:500:50:53

At least he did have those several weeks of freedom

0:50:570:51:00

and he did have the chance to be wild

0:51:000:51:03

and to do what he was meant to do

0:51:030:51:05

and unfortunately, he just couldn't adapt as well as we'd hoped.

0:51:050:51:09

There's better news from the macaw breeding enclosure.

0:51:220:51:25

The chick that was born three months ago has finally fledged.

0:51:260:51:30

MACAW SQUAWKS

0:51:350:51:36

With her brand-new plumage, she is now Scarlet Macaw Number 91.

0:51:380:51:42

In two years' time, she'll be ready for release.

0:51:440:51:46

It's a fantastic sight.

0:51:480:51:50

This little thing that you saw when they were born

0:51:500:51:53

coming out of the nest fully feathered and flying,

0:51:530:51:56

it just draws a big smile on your face.

0:51:560:51:58

It gives you hope.

0:51:580:52:00

The scarlet macaws' flight enclosure is empty.

0:52:030:52:06

The birds are being prepared for their journey to the forest.

0:52:060:52:09

Five of them are having satellite collars fitted

0:52:130:52:15

so they can be tracked in the wild.

0:52:150:52:17

It's time for them to head upriver and into the jungle.

0:52:210:52:24

The macaws are heading into the Sierra Lacandon National Park

0:52:320:52:36

on the border with Mexico.

0:52:360:52:38

THEY SPEAK SPANISH

0:52:380:52:41

The location has been specially selected because

0:52:460:52:49

there have been several sightings

0:52:490:52:50

of wild macaws here at this time of year.

0:52:500:52:52

For the centre's director, Fernando, this is the culmination of

0:53:190:53:24

20 years' work and is one of the most important days of his life.

0:53:240:53:28

IN SPANISH:

0:53:290:53:33

From the river bank, it's roughly a 5km hike to the release site,

0:53:540:53:58

mostly uphill.

0:53:580:54:00

MACAW SQUAWKS

0:54:060:54:09

This is the last time these macaws will ever see

0:54:160:54:20

the bars of a cage.

0:54:200:54:21

The macaws are being released from the top of a hill

0:54:320:54:35

overlooking the forest canopy with plenty of fruiting trees.

0:54:350:54:39

The hope is that they'll find food straightaway

0:54:410:54:44

and soon encounter members of the wild population.

0:54:440:54:47

MACAWS SQUAWK

0:54:500:54:52

The team are making history.

0:55:160:55:18

This is the first time in Guatemala that captive-bred

0:55:200:55:23

scarlet macaws have been released into the wild.

0:55:230:55:26

With these new individuals,

0:55:380:55:40

the wild population has just increased by around 5%.

0:55:400:55:44

-SOBS:

-They're not meant to be in cages and to be able to see them...

0:56:380:56:41

..see them go back, it's...

0:56:430:56:46

..it's just indescribable.

0:56:470:56:49

HE SOBS

0:56:530:56:54

THEY LAUGH

0:56:540:56:57

But this is just the beginning.

0:56:590:57:01

The plan is to release 40 individuals

0:57:020:57:05

over the next five years and gradually bring these majestic birds

0:57:050:57:10

back from the edge of extinction.

0:57:100:57:12

At the Rescue Centre, life goes on as before.

0:57:220:57:25

The next batch of macaws must now start to be prepared for release.

0:57:270:57:31

And there's good news for the baby spider monkey.

0:57:310:57:34

After four months on her own, she has a new friend.

0:57:340:57:38

He's a male spider monkey, also rescued from the pet trade.

0:57:380:57:43

Together, these two will form a new troop.

0:57:430:57:46

Over time, others will join them

0:57:460:57:48

and when they're ready, they'll be returned to the jungle.

0:57:480:57:51

Illegal traffic is still happening and animals are still coming in.

0:57:540:57:58

We will still be here fighting the battle for the animals.

0:58:000:58:03

What keeps you going is making sure that you

0:58:060:58:08

win small battles every time.

0:58:080:58:10

There is hope at the end and we are part of the hope.

0:58:130:58:16

MONKEY SQUEAKS

0:58:200:58:22

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