Bohol is no longer the right place for people who want to own a tarsier or use it for commercial purposes.
This was after the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of Bohol passed an ordinance prohibiting the possession and display of tarsiers, considered as the smallest primate species in the world.
A report in GMA News 24 Oras Wednesday said the approval of the measure was triggered by the proliferation of farms and businesses that are displaying tarsiers for a fee.
Violators of the ordinance would be slapped with a P5,000 fine and will be meted with a jail term of not less than six months, the report said.
The report said tarsiers suffer stress every time they are exposed to humans. It added that the provincial government wanted tarsiers to remain in their natural habitat.
The provincial government also passed a resolution urging the Environment Department to stop issuing wildlife permits that allow the use of tarsiers for commercial purposes.
Aside from Bohol, tarsier can be found in Samar, Surigao and Sulu islands.
* Tarsiers are already endangered creatures and it's a good thing the Government are giving this orders for the local people not to harm the Tarsiers and be used for their personal agenda, but to let them enjoy their natural habitat. *