An hour’s drive down a ragged dirt road, deep in the heart of Uganda’s Kibale National Park, a small research camp sits in the middle of chimpanzee territory. Tangled vines drape ancient trees ...
A video of a chimpanzee from China is going viral, however, for wrong and concerning reasons. It showed the zoo animal holding a cigarette and taking a few puffs, leaving the internet shocked and ...
Doug was the leader of his chimpanzee group. He had quickly gained a reputation from human observers as a fair and tolerant alpha male. One day he was separated from the group for some health ...
Captive chimpanzees are one of the most popular species kept in zoos because of their charismatic appeal and similarity to humans. They are the closest living relatives of humans because of the ...
It was a chimpanzee beloved by Brits throughout the 1970s as it became the star of the PG Tips advert. And now the life story of Choppers, a Western Chimpanzee, that played Grandmother Ada Lott in ...
Also read | Want a snatched face? To achieve defined jawline here's how you should be using God's gua sha, ‘your hands’. Watch It's never too early to start your anti-ageing routine.
A recent study on chimpanzees in Taï National Park in Côte d'Ivoire, West Africa, revealed that chimpanzees are losing traditions of male mating gestures. This coincides with declining chimpanzee ...
San Francisco-based studio Collins was keen to keep Mailchimp’s much-loved winking chimp mascot Freddie, but gave him a slicker overall look. The studio also replaced the previous logotype with a ...
When do you make your bed? In the morning? If you were a chimpanzee, you would likely build it at dusk. Scientists call this process “nest building.” This behavior has existed for millions of years ...
As a professor of Biological Sciences and Anthropology at the University of Southern California (USC), he’s spent decades studying primate behavior — particularly chimpanzee hunting strategies — and ...
R. C. Clarke, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, part 4, pp. 731–732 (1934). J. M. Wyatt and G. M. Vevers, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, part 1, pp. 195–197 (1935).