The coolest animal you know nothing about ... and how we can save it | Patrícia Medici

110,553 views

2015-12-01 ・ TED


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The coolest animal you know nothing about ... and how we can save it | Patrícia Medici

110,553 views ・ 2015-12-01

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
This is one of the most amazing animals on the face of the Earth.
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This is a tapir.
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Now this, this is a baby tapir,
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the cutest animal offspring in the animal kingdom.
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(Laughter)
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By far.
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There is no competition here.
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I have dedicated the past 20 years of my life
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to the research and conservation of tapirs in Brazil,
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and it has been absolutely amazing.
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But at the moment, I've been thinking really, really hard
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about the impact of my work.
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I've been questioning myself about the real contributions I have made
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for the conservation of these animals I love so much.
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Am I being effective
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in safeguarding their survival?
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Am I doing enough?
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I guess the big question here is,
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am I studying tapirs and contributing to their conservation,
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or am I just documenting their extinction?
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The world is facing so many different conservation crises.
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We all know that. It's all over the news every day.
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Tropical forests and other ecosystems are being destroyed,
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climate change, so many species on the brink of extinction:
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tigers, lions, elephants, rhinos, tapirs.
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This is the lowland tapir, the tapir species I work with,
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the largest terrestrial mammal of South America.
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They're massive. They're powerful.
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Adults can weigh up to 300 kilos.
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That's half the size of a horse.
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They're gorgeous.
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Tapirs are mostly found in tropical forests such as the Amazon,
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and they absolutely need large patches of habitat
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in order to find all the resources they need to reproduce and survive.
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But their habitat is being destroyed,
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and they have been hunted out of several parts of their geographic distribution.
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And you see, this is very, very unfortunate
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because tapirs are extremely important for the habitats where they are found.
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They're herbivores.
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Fifty percent of their diet consists of fruit,
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and when they eat the fruit, they swallow the seeds,
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which they disperse throughout the habitat through their feces.
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They play this major role in shaping and maintaining
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the structure and diversity of the forest,
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and for that reason, tapirs are known as gardeners of the forest.
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Isn't that amazing?
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If you think about it,
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the extinction of tapirs would seriously affect
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biodiversity as a whole.
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I started my tapir work in 1996, still very young, fresh out of college,
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and it was a pioneer research and conservation program.
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At that point, we had nearly zero information about tapirs,
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mostly because they're so difficult to study.
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They're nocturnal, solitary, very elusive animals,
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and we got started getting very basic data about these animals.
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But what is it that a conservationist does?
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Well, first, we need data.
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We need field research.
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We need those long-term datasets to support conservation action,
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and I told you tapirs are very hard to study,
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so we have to rely on indirect methods to study them.
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We have to capture and anesthetize them
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so that we can install GPS collars around their necks
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and follow their movements,
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which is a technique used by many other conservationists around the world.
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And then we can gather information about how they use space,
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how they move through the landscape,
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what are their priority habitats,
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and so much more.
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Next, we must disseminate what we learn.
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We have to educate people about tapirs
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and how important these animals are.
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And it's amazing how many people around the world
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do not know what a tapir is.
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In fact, many people think this is a tapir.
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Let me tell you, this is not a tapir.
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(Laughter)
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This is a giant anteater.
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Tapirs do not eat ants. Never. Ever.
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And then next we have to provide training, capacity building.
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It is our responsibility to prepare the conservationists of the future.
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We are losing several conservation battles,
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and we need more people doing what we do,
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and they need the skills, and they need the passion to do that.
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Ultimately, we conservationists,
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we must be able to apply our data,
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to apply our accumulated knowledge
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to support actual conservation action.
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Our first tapir program
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took place in the Atlantic Forest
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in the eastern part of Brazil,
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one of the most threatened biomes in the world.
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The destruction of the Atlantic Forest
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began in the early 1500s,
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when the Portuguese first arrived in Brazil,
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beginning European colonization in the eastern part of South America.
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This forest was almost completely cleared
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for timber, agriculture, cattle ranching and the construction of cities,
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and today only seven percent of the Atlantic forest
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is still left standing.
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And tapirs are found in very, very small, isolated, disconnected populations.
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In the Atlantic Forest, we found out that tapirs move through open areas
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of pastureland and agriculture
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going from one patch of forest to patch of forest.
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So our main approach in this region
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was to use our tapir data to identify the potential places
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for the establishment of wildlife corridors
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in between those patches of forest,
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reconnecting the habitat
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so that tapirs and many other animals could cross the landscape safely.
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After 12 years in the Atlantic Forest,
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in 2008, we expanded our tapir conservation efforts to the Pantanal
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in the western part of Brazil
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near the border with Bolivia and Paraguay.
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This is the largest continuous freshwater floodplain in the world,
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an incredible place
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and one of the most important strongholds for lowland tapirs in South America.
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And working in the Pantanal has been extremely refreshing
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because we found large, healthy tapir populations in the area,
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and we have been able to study tapirs
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in the most natural conditions we'll ever find,
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very much free of threats.
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In the Pantanal, besides the GPS collars, we are using another technique:
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camera traps.
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This camera is equipped with a movement sensor
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and it photographs animals when they walk in front of it.
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So thanks to these amazing devices,
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we have been able to gather precious information
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about tapir reproduction and social organization
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which are very important pieces of the puzzle
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when you're trying to develop those conservation strategies.
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And right now, 2015, we are expanding our work once again
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to the Brazilian Cerrado,
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the open grasslands and shrub forests in the central part of Brazil.
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Today this region is the very epicenter of economic development in my country,
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where natural habitat and wildlife populations
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are rapidly being eradicated by several different threats,
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including once again cattle ranching,
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large sugarcane and soybean plantations,
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poaching, roadkill, just to name a few.
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And somehow, tapirs are still there,
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which gives me a lot of hope.
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But I have to say that starting this new program in the Cerrado
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was a bit of a slap in the face.
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When you drive around
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and you find dead tapirs along the highways
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and signs of tapirs wandering around in the middle of sugarcane plantations
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where they shouldn't be,
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and you talk to kids and they tell you that they know how tapir meat tastes
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because their families poach and eat them,
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it really breaks your heart.
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The situation in the Cerrado made me realize --
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it gave me the sense of urgency.
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I am swimming against the tide.
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It made me realize that despite two decades of hard work
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trying to save these animals, we still have so much work to do
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if we are to prevent them from disappearing.
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We have to find ways to solve all these problems.
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We really do, and you know what?
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We really came to a point in the conservation world
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where we have to think out of the box.
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We'll have to be a lot more creative than we are right now.
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And I told you, roadkill is a big problem for tapirs in the Cerrado,
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so we just came up with the idea of putting reflective stickers
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on the GPS collars we put on the tapirs.
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These are the same stickers used on big trucks
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to avoid collision.
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Tapirs cross the highways after dark,
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so the stickers will hopefully help drivers see this shining thing
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crossing the highway,
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and maybe they will slow down a little bit.
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For now, this is just a crazy idea.
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We don't know. We'll see if it will reduce the amount of tapir roadkill.
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But the point is, maybe this is the kind of stuff that needs to be done.
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And although I'm struggling with all these questions
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in my mind right now,
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I have a pact with tapirs.
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I know in my heart
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that tapir conservation is my cause.
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This is my passion.
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I am not alone.
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I have this huge network of supporters behind me,
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and there is no way I'm ever going to stop.
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I will continue doing this, most probably for the rest of my life.
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And I'll keep doing this for Patrícia, my namesake,
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one of the first tapirs we captured and monitored in the Atlantic Forest
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many, many years ago;
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for Rita and her baby Vincent in the Pantanal.
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And I'll keep doing this for Ted, a baby tapir we captured
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in December last year also in the Pantanal.
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And I will keep doing this
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for the hundreds of tapirs that I've had the pleasure to meet
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over the years
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and the many others I know I will encounter in the future.
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These animals deserve to be cared for.
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They need me. They need us.
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And you know? We human beings deserve to live in a world
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where we can get out there and see and benefit from
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not only tapirs
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but all the other beautiful species,
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now and in the future.
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Thank you so much.
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(Applause)
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