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They appear in more than 4,000 images captured over a two-month period, said Loken, but it's possible one or two families kept returning. "We are trying to find out all we can," he said. "But it really feels like a race against time." Experts not involved in the study were hugely encouraged. "It's indeed a highly enigmatic species," said Erik Meijaard, a conservation scientist who spent more than eight years doing field research in the area. In the past they were hunted to near extinction for their meat and bezoar "stones," he said, which can, on occasion, be found in their guts. Bezoars, as Harry Potter fans know from lectures given by Prof. Snape to first year students, are believed by some to neutralize poison. Meijaard said the animal has long been considered a subspecies of the Hose's Leaf Monkey, which also occurs on the Malaysian side of Borneo, but it now looks like that may not be the case. "We think it might actually be a distinct species," he said, "which would make the Wehea discovery even more important."
[Associated
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