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The dynamics of the Semaq Beri population are as the following:
Historical population
Year
Pop.
±%
1960
1,230
—
1965
1,418
+15.3%
1969
1,406
−0.8%
1974
1,699
+20.8%
Year
Pop.
±%
1980
1,746
+2.8%
1993
2,488
+42.5%
1996
2,488
+0.0%
2000
2,348
−5.6%
Year
Pop.
±%
2003
3,545
+51.0%
2004
3,345
−5.6%
2010
3,413
+2.0%
2014
2,400
−29.7%
Religion
The religious system of the Semaq Beri people is similar to other surrounding Orang Asli groups. They believe that human acts such as teasing or laughing at animals such as monkeys, dogs, cats, land leeches, porcupines, two kinds or birds and three kinds of snakes, and including incest that extends to certain relatives are strictly prohibited and are also considered as talon. By committing talan, the Semoq Beri believe that it will cause a cosmic disaster where the earth will be swallowed by massive waters crashing from heaven and welling up from under the ground. Lately, there are numbers of Semaq Beri communities that have been Islamised through various programmes by government efforts.
Lifestyle
There are those among the Semaq Beri people that are nomadic practices hunter-gathering for a living, while there are those that are semi-nomadic practices some farming with shifting cultivation, and those that are settled primarily relies on farming. Generally women would do much of the gathering while the men would do the hunting, unless women that are not pregnant or nursing a child would also participate in the hunting. While generally mothers spend more time with their children, there is almost no distinguishing in the role of fathers and mothers in society when it comes to holding and caring for the child. Apart from hunting and gathering, the Semaq Beri people also relies on logging roads for access to sell rattan.
References
^ Paul Sidwell & Mathias Jenny (2014). The Handbook of Austroasiatic Languages (2 vols). BRILL. p. 475. ISBN978-90-042-8357-2.
Kyōto Daigaku. Tōnan Ajia Kenkyū Sentā (2001). Tuck-Po Lye (ed.). Orang asli of Peninsular Malaysia: a comprehensive and annotated bibliography. Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University. p. 220. ISBN49-016-6800-5.
Tom Güldemann; Patrick McConvell; Richard A. Rhodes, eds. (2001). The Language of Hunter-Gatherers. Cambridge University Press. p. 191. ISBN11-070-0368-7.
A. Zainal; S.M. Radzi; R. Hashim; C.T. Chik; R. Abu (2012). Current Issues in Hospitality and Tourism: Research and Innovations. CRC Press. p. 391. ISBN978-04-156-2133-5.