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OverviewTarsiers are often introduced to people as a curiosity-wide eyes, tiny hands, and an almost unreal presence that seems to belong in a different era of the natural world. But the closer you look, the clearer the truth becomes: tarsiers are among the most sensitive nocturnal primates on Earth. Their lives depend on quiet, darkness, stable habitat, and freedom from disturbance. Tarsiers Handbook Guide is a thoughtful, responsibility-first exploration of tarsier biology, behavior, and ethical care boundaries, written for readers who want understanding without exploitation and admiration without harm. This guide begins where responsible curiosity should begin: with the animal's reality, not the viewer's desire. Tarsiers are not built for handling, frequent human contact, or display. They are built for precision hunting, night navigation, and cautious movement through complex forest spaces. Their stress thresholds are low, their routines are fragile, and their well-being is tightly linked to environmental stability. Throughout the book, you will learn what makes tarsiers unique, why they are so easily harmed by pressure and disruption, and how people can choose respect over access. The handbook explains tarsier biology in clear, grounded language-how their sensory systems shape their decisions, how their nocturnal rhythms affect feeding and movement, and how their bodies are designed for sudden, controlled leaps rather than constant interaction. You will gain insight into communication patterns that are easy to miss, including subtle posture shifts, freezing, and avoidance behaviors that signal discomfort long before obvious distress appears. These details matter because many of the most harmful situations begin with misunderstanding: assuming the animal is calm when it is actually overwhelmed, or mistaking stillness for trust. A central theme of the book is ethical boundaries. It addresses the uncomfortable but necessary truth that ""care"" is not automatically compassionate if the conditions cannot meet the animal's needs. You will learn why private ownership is unsuitable, why many tourism encounters are harmful even when marketed as gentle, and why the most humane relationship people can have with tarsiers is usually one defined by distance, silence, and protection of habitat. Where professional care or research environments exist, the handbook clarifies what welfare-focused standards look like: minimal disturbance, carefully controlled light and noise, complex enclosure environments that prioritize refuge, and protocols designed to reduce stress rather than create access. Beyond biology and boundaries, this guide asks a deeper question: what does living alongside a creature this sensitive teach people? The answer runs through every chapter. Tarsiers teach restraint-because wanting closeness does not justify intrusion. They teach patience-because observation should never become pressure. They teach responsibility-because the impact people have is not measured by intention, but by outcomes. The handbook connects these principles to real decisions: how to observe responsibly, how to support conservation, how to choose ethical education, and how to recognize when a ""once in a lifetime"" experience is actually a quiet form of harm. This book is ideal for wildlife enthusiasts, students, educators, conservation-minded travelers, and anyone who wants a humane, mature understanding of tarsiers that aligns with modern welfare and ethical standards. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Narry BerryPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.90cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.227kg ISBN: 9798243802970Pages: 164 Publication Date: 13 January 2026 Audience: Children/juvenile , Children / Juvenile Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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