Chimpanzees what do they look like




















Chimps are truly fascinating animals, especially the fact that they are I hope sooner in the coming generation chimps are taken of the endangered list, as losing such animal would be devastating. Now I think gorillas are my favourite animal because I learnt more about them! Ask a parent or guardian to check it out first and remember to stay safe online. See all. Chimp with baby on grass: Kristof Degreef, Dreamstime. Chimpanzee in front of baby: Smellme, Dreamstime.

Save Avatar Randomize. Home Is Good Get messy, explore and appreciate nature, all from the safety of home! Hedgehog Facts! Discover these brilliant beasts of the Arctic…. Discover these incredible, gentle giants of the forest…. Scientists have long known that chimpanzees are closely related to humans and recent genetic sequencing has revealed that humans share 99 percent of their DNA with chimps.

But when it comes down to developing facial features, the many difference lie with how that percent-similar DNA is regulated and expressed. An entire chimp community can sometimes have as many as members, made up of many different family groups. One experienced adult male chimp can be the leader of the troop, although in other troops leadership is shared among several males. Chimpanzees use body language, facial expressions, hand-clapping, grooming, and kissing to communicate within their troop.

Usually a male stays in the community into which he was born, but females transfer to others when they become adults.

Baby apes. Female chimps usually give birth for the first time when they are between 12 and 15 years old. Newborn chimps have pink skin under their dark hair that later turns black as they age. They are extremely helpless at birth, and the youngsters must stay with their mother until age seven before they can survive on their own.

Later it transfers to her back and uses this piggyback style of riding for the next seven months or so. A young chimp gets milk from its mother until it is about three years old.

It can begin walking on its own at about age four but continues to stay with Mom for a few more years, learning all the skills needed to survive. A mother chimp develops a close bond with her young that may last a lifetime. Chimpanzees have been involved in many scientific studies. The only relatively large and secure populationis in Gashaka-Gumti National Park in Nigeria, with an estimated population of up to 1, View Chimpanzee populations in a larger map.

What are the main threats? The main threats to the chimpanzee are habitat loss and hunting for bushmeat. The relative severity of these threats differs from region to region, but the two are linked. Habitat loss and degradation Degradation of forests through logging, mining, farming, and other forms of land development is contributing to the decline of primate species throughout tropical Africa.

Remaining habitat patches are often small and unconnected, leaving chimpanzee populations isolated. Deforestation is most advanced in West Africa, where only remnant tracts of primary rainforest remain. The small populations of western, Nigerian, and eastern chimpanzees are primarily located in remnant forest reserves and national parks. In many such "protected areas", poaching for meat and live infants is common, as is unauthorized logging, mining and farming. Logging activities improve access to formerly remote forest areas, leading to increased hunting pressure.

More on habitat loss Bushmeat 'Bushmeat' has always been a primary source of dietary protein in Central and West African countries. However in recent years, hunting for bushmeat, once a subsistence activity, has become heavily commercialized and much of the meat goes to urban residents who can afford to pay premium prices for it.

In addition, apes are often injured or killed in snares set for other animals. Infant chimpanzees are frequently taken alive and sold in the cities as pets.

Many conservationists believe that the bushmeat trade is now the greatest threat to forest biodiversity in West and Central Africa. Disease - the Ebola crisis In late an outbreak of Ebola hemorrhagic fever in humans was reported in the north of the Republic of Congo on the border with Gabon.

The human infections coincided with a large-scale die-off of great apes in the region. Two great apes are found in Central Africa, the area currently affected by Ebola: western lowland gorilla and the central chimpanzee. Both have been severely affected by the virus, which has drastically reduced populations. The disease reportedly had a great impact in Odzala National Park, a site known to have the highest density of great apes in Africa. What is WWF doing? Our approach includes: Establishing, strengthening and managing protected areas in a number of chimpanzee range states.



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