Viral Videos Drive Slaughter Of Spider Monkey Families For Illegal Pet Trade
Matthew Russell
The videos look harmless: a diapered spider monkey sipping from a bottle, cuddled like a newborn. Behind those clips sits a violent pipeline that begins in the forests of southern Mexico and ends in U.S. parking lots and living rooms, as poachers kill adult females and rip infants from their bodies to satisfy social media-driven demand, CBS News reports.

Poachers kill mother spider monkeys to steal their infants.
From Canopy to Car Trunk
Poachers often shoot mothers out of trees while babies cling to them. Troops rush to defend the fallen, and more animals die. Because females give birth only every two to four years, each stolen infant represents years of lost recovery, according to The Cool Down.
Survivors are stuffed into bags, bound or sedated, and moved across the Texas border, where nearly 90 babies have been confiscated in just 18 months, CBS News reports.Clicks, Cash, and a Parking-Lot Market
The pipeline thrives on viral posts that glamorize pet primates in outfits and diapers. That visibility converts into sales arranged on mainstream platforms and completed in big-box store parking lots, as documented by a joint broadcast investigation cited by People. One seller quoted $6,500 for a two-month-old infant. Federal law prohibits importing primates as pets, yet loopholes and light penalties keep trafficking profitable while enforcement resources lag.

Babies are sedated and stuffed into bags for transport.
What Rescuers See
Confiscated babies arrive dehydrated, malnourished, and terrified. Some “huddle in a corner,” a veterinarian told NPR. Many cannot return to the wild without their mothers.
In Texas, the Gladys Porter Zoo bottle-feeds and stabilizes infants while caring for 1,600 other animals; the Association of Zoos and Aquariums is piloting placements to share the burden nationwide, report[s](https://www.cbsnews.com/news/poachers-killing-spider-monkeys-kidnapping-babies-selling-them-americans/) the Houston Chronicle.

Nearly 90 infant monkeys have been seized at the Texas border.
Texas as a Throughline
The Texas-Mexico border has become a corridor for exotic wildlife contraband. Agents have found infants in backpacks and apartments; a Houston trafficker received prison time and fines for arranging multiple smuggling attempts, according to the Houston Chronicle.
Even when seizures succeed, the species loses: each infant removed from a troop magnifies social disruption and erodes already fragile populations, The Cool Down explains.
The Choice in Front of Us
Law enforcement calls it an uphill fight—too few staff, too many sellers, too much attention-economy fuel. The most immediate pressure point is demand.
“If you care at all about this species … don’t make the purchase,” the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Jim Stinebaugh told CBS News.
A cute video is not a harmless indulgence. It can be the last link in a chain that starts with gunfire in a rainforest and ends with a baby primate in a diaper, alone.
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