Thursday, July 7, 2011



Monkey theft and self-imaging cameras 'shoot you'
After stealing a camera, Macaque monkeys in Indonesia has its own imaging in multiple positions very funny.
Photographer David Slater (46) in Coleford, Gloucestershire (UK) visiting national parks on the island of Sulawesi, northern Indonesia, the colony faced Macaque monkeys friendly black crest. After stealing the camera, mischievous monkeys start device and excited because they see the mirror image of the lens.
Monkeys against the camera and photographed his own.
David said: "A child of them accidentally press buttons and make sounds that make it exciting. Initially, we grimaced key for the first time that a visible reflection. Then they dance around around the camera and look like they're posing as a click ".
"It was an interesting scene. The monkey had taken hundreds of photos when I get to be machines, but not many pictures of them clearly. It is clear that monkeys do not know how to shoot. I wish I could longer for the monkey in the capture of its family image, "the British photographer said.
Monkey theft and self-imaging cameras 'shoot you'
Black crested Macaque monkeys are particularly rare species and threatened serious.
Black crested Macaque monkeys are particularly rare species but are seriously threatened. They are the subjects of a group of scientists from the Netherlands. David said, the apes are not particularly intelligent as chimpanzees, but very inquisitive. "Although we may never contact with humans before, but monkeys do not feel we are threatened. That is why I can go with them all day," David said.

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