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Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest

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LEMSIP

Missy’s story

June 12, 2013 by Debbie

Missy cracks us up every day.

She is super active, but at times can be calm, gentle and is very intense and serious about grooming sessions. She also likes to use tools to groom herself. She doesn’t sit still for long though—every day she runs so fast around the playroom chasing Annie or on the hill just for the fun of it. Like Burrito and Foxie, she’s pretty goofy, has a great sense of humor, and will even sometimes crack herself up. She’s very energetic and has the ability to get just about anyone to play with her.

On Young’s Hill she seems to prefer to be an acrobat, and often times will walk along the firehoses like a tight rope rather than the structures themselves. To her that probably is just more fun. It’s awesome so see her enjoying herself so much.

Missy’s birthday is unknown but it’s estimated she was born in 1975, and Buckshire purchased her from a private breeder. Missy has two tattoos: “CH504” on her chest, which was from LEMSIP; and “#133” which is from another lab, possibly White Sands. We only have a few records from Buckshire and LEMSIP, and nothing prior to 1987, though it is likely she was either at LEMSIP or another lab previously. While at LEMSIP she was used in hepatitis vaccine trials and used as a breeder. In 1987 she gave birth to her first infant on record:

April 25, 1987: Male infant live born Day 229 of gestation. Showed a great deal of affection towards the infant but did not know now to carry him to breast or suckle him. Her behavior did not improve over the following week, during which time nutritional maintenance was given, and the baby was removed permanently to the nursery for rearing. 

December 12, 1987: Small amount of placental tissue aborted, accompanied by uterine bleeding (very early gestation.)

June 11, 1989: Female infant born Day 229 of gestation. Did not pick up infant at all, which was therefore removed to the nursery for rearing.

July 14, 1991: Stillborn female infant Day 225 of gestation.

In Late 1992 she moved back to Buckshire, where she lived, warehoused, until being rescued by Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest in 2008. Though her records do not indicate she was being used in any active biomedical research protocols during these years at Buckshire, just like the other chimpanzees there, Missy was routinely knocked down for blood draws, physicals, and tuberculosis tests.

Missy arriving at CSNW in 2008:
web Missy 2

web missy FR day 2 Picture 056

web missy day 3 nest bare belly Picture 037

Missy and her best friend Annie playing in the early sanctuary days:
web Annie, missy play 2

Today Missy is brave, easy-going, playful, and full of energy. It’s very hard to think of her stuck in small cages no bigger than a coat closet when she runs, full speed, across the open-air enclosure of Young’s Hill and scrambles up tall posts without a second thought.

web Missy run feet off ground young's hill YH IMG_5513

web Missy climb post Young's Hill YH IMG_8084

Annie and Missy now get to play with no cage above their head:

web Annie Missy wrestle play playface play bite climbing structure YH IMG_4436

And at the end of the day, she can relax in peace:

web Missy nest cute face blankets playroom PR IMG_4310

Give Five for Missy. $5 pays for one meal, and Missy loves fresh produce that provides her the calories she needs to keep her speed up!

Filed Under: Chimp histories, Chimpanzees in Biomedical Research, Missy, Sanctuary Tagged With: advocacy, Animal Welfare, biomedical research, Buckshire, chimpanzee rescue, Cle Elum 7, csnw, LEMSIP, Missy, primate protection, Sanctuary

Jamie’s story

June 10, 2013 by Debbie

Jamie is probably the smartest primate you’ll ever meet. Her exact birthdate is unknown, but she was likely born in 1977. We celebrate her birthday on Halloween every year – it fits her mischievous personality. Jamie’s early years were spent around humans. She lived with a trainer and was probably used in some form of entertainment. She was clearly exposed to a lot more human-like things than most lab chimpanzees are.

Jamie’s records are really scarce. What we can decipher is that Buckshire likely purchased Jamie in the mid 80s, after she was with a trainer for about nine years. After that, she may have been leased to the Laboratory for Experimental Medicine and Surgery in Primates (LEMSIP) in New York, where she was given the tattoo “#CH522.” She was likely used in hepatitis B vaccine trials, and possibly as a breeder, though we have no records of any offspring.

Jamie’s tattoo on her chest reads “522.” On her first day at CSNW, you could still make it out on her pale skin:

web jamie tattoo early Picture 020

All of the technician notes from Jamie’s physicals including something along the lines of “pulls hair from stomach.” In captivity, and especially in dismal conditions, chimpanzees will develop stereotypic behaviors such as over-grooming by pulling their hair. Diana noted Jamie’s bare belly on their first visit to Buckshire. In the lab, Jamie had very little choices and zero control over her life. She resorted to pulling her hair out due to pure boredom.

web jamie bare belly early

Unfortunately, Jamie still exhibits this behavior. For the first year she was at the sanctuary, we saw no sign of her hair plucking. Now it varies from no sign at all to a small, bare patch. Though her environment has improved exponentially, the habits that chimpanzees pick up in situations of deprivation often continue even when their environment improves. And no captive situation can provide the rich social, emotional, and mental stimulation that chimpanzees evolved to experience. It is unfair that Jamie has to live in captivity, and we think she knows that.

It’s impossible to imagine Jamie in a small biomedical cage with nothing to keep her mind stimulated, and we’re so happy that we can now provide ways for her to stay active. Whether it’s drawing, putting together tools, taking things apart, working on a tricky project, getting a new boot, or expressing her innate chimpanzee-ness on Young’s Hill, these are all things that she did not have during her decades when she was viewed as a mere tool for biomedical progress.

Jamie enjoying a piece of fruit from her breakfast forage:

web Jamie stand eat food orange peel look at camera YH (ek) IMG_8958

Jamie and Jody investigating something on the hill:

web Jamie Jody search for critter log bridge YH IMG_6791

Jamie, quite content, taking a nap with a boot:

Jamie with her boot

Celebrate the “boss lady” and her amazing new freedom she has in sanctuary. Give Five today and share with your friends!

Filed Under: Apes in Entertainment, Chimp histories, Chimpanzees in Biomedical Research, Jamie, Sanctuary Tagged With: advocacy, Animal Welfare, biomedical research, Buckshire, chimpanzee rescue, chimps in entertainment, Cle Elum 7, csnw, Jamie, LEMSIP, pets, primate protection, Sanctuary

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