Cape Town officials are trying very hard to control the wild baboons. They warn people not to feed the monkeys, and residents get trash cans equipped with locks.
The city also hires guards to patrol certain areas, scaring away aggressive baboons with noisemakers and paintball guns.
Some animal rights organizations have criticized these practices. They say the city is treating the baboons cruelly. But city leaders insist that they’re actually helping the baboons, because animals that get food from humans often lose their ability to survive in the wild.
That doesn’t seem to worry the baboons. They avoid the paintball guns by waiting just outside the city. Then they dash in for five minutes, grab some food, and make their escape.
Scientists estimate that baboons in the wild spend more than half their time searching for food. The Cape Town baboons find what they need pretty quickly. That gives them plenty of free time to spend resting, grooming, fighting—and planning their next raid.