Chimpanzees
just don't understand how humans can be so careless
There are four subspecies of
chimpanzees:
P.
troglodytes verus
Western
chimpanzee
P.
t. troglodytes
Central
chimpanzee
P.
t. schweinfurthi
Eastern
chimpanzee
P.t.
vellerosus
Eastern
Nigerian - West Cameroon chimpanzee
SIZE Head and body
length 63.5 to 94.0cm. Height when erect 100 to 170cm.
WEIGHT Males 34 to 70kg. Females 26 to 50kg.
AVERAGE LIFE EXPECTANCY Maximum lifespan in the
wild may be 50 years (Nowak, 1991).
NORMAL DIET The Chimpanzee eats a wide range of
foods, concentrating on fruits, flowers and seeds, but including some young
leaves and a variety of small mammals and invertebrates.
NORMAL LIFESTYLE Chimpanzees live in communities
of between 20 to 106 animals, with an average size of about 35 animals. Foraging
and traveling parties are about 2 to 10 animals.
Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes-(Greek
meaning for "cave dweller")) are found in 21 African countries- from the west coast of the
continent to as far east as western Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, and
Tanzania.
Chimps live in the greatest
concentrations in the rain forest areas on the equatorial forest
"belt."
Chimpanzees live in social groups called
communities. Chimps communicate with a
wide range of calls, postures and gestures.
In July 1960, Jane Goodall
set out to Tanzania's Gombe forest to live among the chimpanzees. Her
discovery that chimpanzees made and used tools was groundbreaking, as
humans were previously believed to be the only species to do so.
Chimpanzees
rarely live past the age of 40 in the wild, but have been known to reach the age
of more than 60 in captivity.
Tarzan
(John Weissmuller) and Cheetah making a movie
Cheeta,
star of Tarzan is still alive as of 2007 at the age of 75, making him the oldest
known chimpanzee in the world.
Cheetah
at age 75
In retirement Cheeta lives at
a primate sanctuary called Creative Habitats and Enrichment for Endangered
and Threatened Apes (or CHEETA) in Palm Springs, California. He watches
television and makes paintings which are sold to benefit primate-related
charities. He often watches his old films with his grandson, Jeeter. He
also likes to leaf through books (presumably with lots of pictures) and
"play" the piano
NASA Space Program
Chimpanzees
Chimpanzee Ham is greeted by
recovery ship Commander after his flight on the Mercury Redstone rocket.
On January 31, 1961, Ham,
whose name was an acronym for H olloman A ero M ed,
became the first chimpanzee in space, aboard the Mercury Redstone rocket
on a sub-orbital flight very similar to Alan Shepard's. Ham was brought
from the French Camaroons, West Africa, where he was born July 1957, to
Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico in 1959. The original flight plan
called for an altitude of 115 miles and speeds ranging up to 4400 mph.
However, due to technical problems, the spacecraft carrying Ham reached an
altitude of 157 miles and a speed of 5857 mph and landed 422 miles
downrange rather than the anticipated 290 miles. Ham performed well during
his flight and splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean 60 miles from the
recovery ship. He experienced a total of 6.6 minutes of weightlessness
during a 16.5-minute flight. A post-flight medical examination found Ham
to be slightly fatigued and dehydrated, but in good shape otherwise. Ham's
mission paved the way for the successful launch of America's first human
astronaut, Alan B. Shepard, Jr., on May 5, 1961. Upon the completion of a
thorough medical examination, Ham was placed on display at the Washington
Zoo in 1963 where he lived alone until September 25, 1980. He then was
moved to the North Carolina Zoological Park in Asheboro. Upon his death on
January 17, 1983, Ham's body was preserved and loaned by the Smithsonian
Institution to the International Space Hall of Fame in Alamogordo, New
Mexico.
Lift-off of Mercury-Atlas 5
with space chimp Enos November 19, 1961 from Kennedy Space Center. NASA
Image
Enos became the first chimp to
orbit the earth on November 29, 1961, aboard a Mercury Atlas rocket.
Although the mission plan originally called for three orbits, due to a
malfunctioning thruster and other technical difficulties, flight
controllers were forced to terminate Enos' flight after two orbits.
Chimpanzee Enos wearing a
space suit and lying in his flight couch as a handler holds his hands
while being prepared for insertion into the Mercury-Atlas 5 capsule. NASA
Image
Enos landed in the recovery
area and was picked up 75 minutes after splashdown. He was found to be in
good overall condition and both he and the Mercury spacecraft performed
well. His mission concluded the testing for a human orbital flight,
achieved by John Glenn on February 20, 1962. Enos died at Holloman Air
Force Base of a non-space related case of dysentery 11 months after his
flight.
Lab Chimpanzees
As of November 2007, there
were 1,300 chimpanzees housed in 10 U.S. laboratories (out of 3,000 great
apes living in captivity there), either wild-caught, or acquired from
circuses, animal trainers, or zoos. Most of the labs either conduct or
make the chimps available for invasive research, defined as
"inoculation with an infectious agent, surgery or biopsy conducted
for the sake of research and not for the sake of the chimpanzee, and/or
drug testing." Two federally funded laboratories use chimps: Yerkes
National Primate Research Laboratory at Emory University in Atlanta,
Georgia, and the Southwest National Primate Center in San Antonio, Texas.
Five hundred chimps have been retired from laboratory use in the U.S. and
live in sanctuaries in the U.S. or Canada.
Deforestation and commercial
hunting for bushmeat are taking a terrible toll on most chimpanzee
populations.
In 1960 there were an
estimated population of 1 million chimpanzees- today there is an estimated
population of about 100,000.
To
learn more about Bonobos, Chimpanzees,
Orangutans and Gorillas visit and join the following organizations by clicking
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Data
compiled from The British Antarctic Study, NASA, Environment Canada,
UNEP, EPA and
other sources as stated and credited Researched by Charles
Welch-Updated dailyThis
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