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chimpanzee

Tucked away

July 6, 2016 by Katelyn

With things returning to normal after our recent brush fire and the warmth of summer, the chimpanzees have been tucked away relaxing for most of the day.

During a walk, Jamie chose to sit in the shade of the tall grass (while a certain caregiver accompanying her sweated it out in the hot sun until she gave the cue it was time to move on):

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Jamie’s view at the time so I don’t blame her:

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Negra enjoyed the breakfast forage from her shady cabin on Young’s Hill…:

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…before making her way in for a nap:

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And then there was this person relaxing every which way at the top of the toasty greenhouse:

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Of course, it’s Foxie and Dora.

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Filed Under: Foxie, Jamie, Negra, Sanctuary, Young's Hill Tagged With: chimpanzee, chimpanzee retirement, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Foxie, Jamie, Negra, Sanctuary, young's hill

Happy 4th of July!

July 4, 2016 by Elizabeth

Happy 4th of July from the Cle Elum Seven!

Filed Under: Annie, Burrito, Food, Foxie, Jamie, Jody, Missy, Negra, Sanctuary Tagged With: Animal Welfare, Annie, Burrito, chimpanzee, chimpanzee rescue, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, Foxie, Jamie, Jody, Missy, Negra, Sanctuary

Today is in memory of Maxine Stark

July 4, 2016 by Katelyn

Today’s day of sanctuary was sponsored by Kimberle Stark in memory of her mom, Maxine Stark. Kimberle shared this lovely message about her mom:

“My mom passed away on July 4th and she loved chimps and loved the sanctuary for the good life you’re now providing for the chimps who deserve a better life.”

Kimberle, we’re just honored that you would think of the chimpanzees today. Thank you so much for wanting to give them a special day in honor of your mom. It makes us so happy to know how much Maxine loved the chimps and we will all be celebrating her life with you, along with all the many forms of freedom generous supporters like you make possible for the chimpanzees to experience in their sanctuary home. Especially, the freedom to just be. Our hearts are with you today and we wish you a day surrounded by the love and memories of your mom.

Jody:

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Negra:

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Annie:

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Filed Under: Annie, Jody, Negra, Sanctuary, Sponsor-a-day Tagged With: Annie, chimpanzee, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee retirement, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Jody, Negra, Sanctuary, Sponsor-a-day

Highway 10 Fire

July 2, 2016 by Diana

Today started out pretty normal. Us humans were busy cleaning all morning, with breaks to walk around the hill with Jamie and check in with the other chimps. We had finished cleaning the playroom and had started cleaning the front rooms. I was over by the playroom door and Jamie was craning her neck and body to see out. We know Jamie pretty well, and we knew something was up, so Anna went outside to see what Jamie might be looking at, and saw a plume of smoke a few hundred yards away.

 

The chimps have seen smoke from intentional fires on our property (when there’s not a burn ban!) and our neighbor’s property before, and I don’t think they’ve reacted to it, but maybe they knew this was different, having gone through the Taylor Bridge Fire in 2012.

Their alarm was warranted. The fire was close and was moving through the ground cover, burning some of the trees that had been downed in the fire four years ago.

hillside smoke

 

Just like the Taylor Bridge Fire, it traveled up the hill, towards some of the properties that had been rebuilt.

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They came through okay, though, thanks to the firefighters.

fire helicopter

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Thank goodness for firefighters, and thank goodness for volunteers and data collectors! Volunteer Ally and primatology student Jake jumped into action to help. We were asked to evacuate the house that J.B. and I share with our two dogs and two cats. Ally and Jake were lifesavers – helping get harnesses on the dogs and put the reluctant cats in crates, then, with caregiver Anna’s help, driving them to safety at Jake’s house.

In the meantime, J.B. got the emergency sprinkler system, which pumps water from the pond above the house:

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We had brought the chimps inside the building and shut all of the windows and doors, so the window in front room four was the spot to watch from. Most of the chimps were very calm. Jody and Foxie were a bit anxious, with Jody sticking close by Burrito most of the afternoon.

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In the below two photos, Burrito and Jody were lying next to each other:

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Foxie kept a Dora doll close:

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We gave them some extra treats today and otherwise followed the routine as much as possible. They are in bed now – Jamie with her boots, Foxie with her dolls, and Negra under a blanket.

Our dogs and cats are back home (thank you Anna, Katelyn, Ally & Jake!).

The fire seems to have sparked again well above the property as I was writing this. The helicopters were on it immediately. There are also still some smoldering spots nearby, but we feel that we and our neighbors are safe with the skilled firefighters working so hard.

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We lost power (the electric company probably shut it off due to the fire), but the chimp house’s generator kicked on immediately, not even skipping a beat.

J.B. and I are making our own dinner in the chimp house kitchen, but trying to keep things quiet so we don’t wake any of the chimpanzees as the slumber safe in their nests.

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Filed Under: Sanctuary, Volunteers Tagged With: chimp, chimpanzee, Cle Elum, csnw, fire, highway 10 fire, hwy 10, Sanctuary, shelter

Swellings

July 1, 2016 by J.B.

Upon seeing chimpanzees for the first time, most people are struck by the extensive physical similarities between our two species, but there’s one notable difference that also catches everyone’s attention…

What’s wrong with their butts?

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Chimpanzees, along with many other primates such as baboons and macaques, advertise their fertility by means of sexual swellings. As they approach ovulation, ovarian hormones induce the skin around their genitals to swell and take on a pink hue, an effect known as tumescence. Following ovulation, other hormones cause the swelling to subside and the roughly 35-day menstrual cycle begins again.

Why does this happen? Believe it or not, no one really knows for sure. It could be that it promotes paternal care by increasing the certainly that a particular male was the father of a female’s offspring. Or it could increase competition between males for mating access, thereby helping females filter for males with greater fitness. Or it could provide more immediate benefits to the females, as the males must work to protect them during their consortships. The list of hypotheses goes on, but none seem to be fully supported by the data on their own. In all likelihood, it is some combination of these factors. Interestingly (to primatologists, anyway), a recent study of free-living bonobos found that while they exhibit sexual swellings, their swellings do not reliably indicate fertility as they do in their chimpanzee cousins. Like humans, it seems that bonobos conceal ovulation. Bonobo societies are structured very differently than chimpanzee societies – they are quite famously female dominated – so it may be that a different evolutionary strategy was required.

One thing is for sure – swellings have a significant effect on male chimpanzees. Male chimpanzees aren’t exactly the more level-headed of the two sexes to begin with, but when tumescent females are present, all bets are off. Those big, pink backsides make the females incredibly attractive to the males and it can ignite a lot of testosterone-fueled behavior. In addition to an overall uptick in group tension and aggression, one result we often see is a behavior called mate guarding.

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I remember learning about mate guarding the hard way when volunteering at another sanctuary. I was just getting to know two young adult chimps named Jethro and Rachel and I enjoyed interacting with both of them each time I visited. Then one day, all I did was say hello to Rachel and before I knew it, Jethro had spit a huge mouthful of water directly in my face. The lesson was clear: Rachel was off limits when she had her swelling.

We don’t see mate guarding per se here at CSNW, but that’s not to say that Burrito is unaffected by the swellings of the females in his group. He loves them. He loves them so much that he follows the girls wherever they go when they have their swellings. He loves them so much that he sleeps on the floor below the benches where the girls makes their nests so that he can stare at them all night.

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Sadly, Burrito never exhibits any other mating behavior. Many chimps raised in unnatural environments like laboratory nurseries or human homes never develop these skills, despite some rather obvious biological urges. But while his interest in the girls may be limited to looking, he is unrelenting. In the wild, the young, tumescent females – dubbed “pink ladies” by Jane Goodall – are said to like the attention it brings them. My guess is that Burrito’s group mates would gladly send him off on a vacation one week each month if they could.

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Among the Cle Elum Seven, only Annie, Jamie, and Jody experience sexual swellings. Foxie and Missy had complete hysterectomies shortly before coming to the sanctuary due to the discovery of uterine tumors during their pre-shipment physicals. As a result, they no longer experience the same estrogen and progesterone cycles that govern these swellings. And while we have no record of Negra undergoing a hysterectomy, she doesn’t cycle either. Menopause isn’t common in chimpanzees, but just as we see in humans, there are other factors that can disrupt or cease menstrual cycles.

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There is a lot of natural variation in the size of the females’ swellings, and on top of that, physical trauma to the sex skin can cause it to lose its shape. So some swellings, like Annie’s, are barely noticeable, while others, like Jody’s, are so big they make sitting down difficult. According to Burrito (and much of the scientific literature) it seems that bigger is generally better, but that probably depends on your perspective.

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Filed Under: Chimpanzee Behavior, Sanctuary Tagged With: butt, chimpanzee, northwest, rescue, Sanctuary, sexual swelling, tumescence

Summer mornings

June 29, 2016 by Katelyn

Our recent heatwave is on the down-slide, but it’s still quite warm and the chimps and humans are each enjoying the summer days in their own way. After breakfast, most of the chimpanzees headed for the still cool grass of Young’s Hill (with the exception of Negra who took a break from her adventures for the day and made a nest at the top of the greenhouse where she could enjoy the morning breeze). Annie chose to take a walk up the hill bipedally to join Foxie and her troll. If you look closely you can spot the troll’s red hair on Foxie’s back.

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Missy took her breakfast chow and literally ran out to climb up a structure where she could enjoy it with a view:

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Jody was the first to head out onto Young’s Hill this morning and quickly disappeared into the tall grass to forage for wild greens before her buddy, Burrito, could catch up with her. So he opted to sit in the raceway which leads from the greenhouse to the hill and enjoy the morning sun with me, remaining on the lookout for Jody’s return.

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After a busy morning on the hill, by late morning things got pretty warm and Jamie sprawled out in a comfy nest to cool off and doze in the summer breeze.

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How profoundly grateful we are that the chimpanzees’ days are filled with such serenity, comfort and peace. Thanks to all of you who make the hours, days and seasons of their lives so beautiful.

Filed Under: Annie, Burrito, Foxie, Jamie, Missy, Sanctuary, Trolls, Young's Hill Tagged With: Annie, Burrito, chimp, chimp sanctuary, chimpanzee, chimpanzee retirement, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, csnw, Foxie, Jamie, Missy, Sanctuary, young's hill

What’s in a Nest?

June 25, 2016 by Diana

An intriguing article is making the rounds about a primatologist named Koichiro Zamma who has developed a bed, called the humankind evolution bed, that is based on how chimpanzees construct their own beds in the forests. Apparently he tried out a chimpanzee-constructed nest  while tracking chimpanzees in the wild and found it to be very comfortable, waking up quite refreshed after his night of nesting.

A prototype of his invention is currently on display at Kyoto University Museum in Japan. Articles say this about the bed: “The mattress features a depression in the centre to replicate the natural dip in a chimp’s treetop bed and has a raised periphery for the head, legs and arms. It is supported by a frame made from woven paper string for maximum breathability, and eight curved legs that are designed to allow the bed to rock almost imperceptibly.”

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Megumi Kaji of the Research Association of Sleep and Society takes a nap on the humankind evolution bed. Photograph: Koichiro Zamma

 

As we’ve written in the past, chimpanzees in captivity make similar constructions for their nests as their free-living counterparts, building up walls of material (blankets, straw, paper, etc), and laying in the middle.

Jody is a master nest-maker:

 

Missy makes a pretty mean nest too. This was one of my favorite photos from the early days of the sanctuary:

 
Missy in tire nest

In fact, these two were featured in this tutorial-style blog post about how to nest.

Here are some more photos of nesting from the Cle Elum Seven:

Jamie's paper nest

Missy constructed nest

Missy sleeping in a big nest

Negra nesting

 

I have to admit that I wonder if perhaps Zamma’s restful night of sleep was due to being particularly exhausted after a day of following chimpanzees around the forest, but I remain intrigued.

What do you think – are chimpanzees on to something that we should be paying attention to? Should we ditch our flat mattresses? Would you want a humankind evolution bed?

 

Filed Under: Chimpanzee Behavior, Free-living chimps, Nesting Tagged With: bed, chimp, chimpanzee, csnw, humankind evolution bed, kyoto univiersity, Nesting, research, Sanctuary, welfare

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