Wild bonnet, long-tailed, and rhesus macaques are trapped and taken for medical research in laboratories (with female long-tailed macaques taken to breeding facilities and males exported to other countries to be used for research). Some macaques who are deemed “problems” are released from laboratories into forests, which threaten wild populations.
Various macaque species are also traded and kept as exotic pets. Male pig-tailed macaques, for instance, are used in Thailand to pick coconuts and may be sold for $1,000 USD, and other pig-tailed and bonnet macaques are forced to perform in shows. However, macaques are wholly unsuited to a captive lifestyle (link to PDF 1). Born Free works in Zambia, Malawi, and Ethiopia to help rescue primates from captive exploitation, rehabilitate them, and return them to the wild whenever possible. And, at the Born Free USA Primate Sanctuary, we provide a safe, permanent home to formerly captive macaques and other primates.
Born Free also advocates for legislation to protect macaques from harm, including the Captive Primate Safety Act and the Sanctuary Regulatory Fairness Act (the latter of which we assisted in drafting). Unfortunately, neither bill is currently active in Congress.