Sentences with phrase «with other chimps»

Highly social by nature, they should live with other chimps and in a stimulating environment with room to move around.

Not exact matches

CHIMP (Charitable + Impact) is an online giving platform for Canadians that makes it easy to support any charity in Canada, raise money with others, and track impact over time.
During this time, the stock market was sky rocketing, and my assessment (along with many others at the time) was that even a chimp could pick stocks.
I can ramble off a few relatively intelligent animals: talking parrots and whales, along with video game playing chimps and apes, sign language talking apes, and animal kingdom is filled with paired species that can notice a mate, find food, build shelter, and other things.
9 Other investigators have found similar results with a chimp using the terms «same» or «different.»
Some chimps use rocks to crack nuts, others fish for termites with blades of grass and a gorilla has been seen gauging the depth of water with the equivalent of a dipstick, but no animal wields tools with quite the alacrity of the New Caledonian crow.
Once you blur the line, once you realize that we're not the only creatures with personalities, minds, and above all, feelings, that gives you a new respect, not just for the chimp but for other creatures.
This kind of prosocial behavior, a form of altruism that seeks to benefit others and promote cooperation, has now been found in chimps, the species that Darwin did more than any other human to connect us with.
Then the chimps suddenly split into two groups — one based in the north, one in the south — that spent less time socialising with each other.
Alda: I was sitting with Brian Hare, primatologist, and we were sitting on a bench and we were right next to a big glass window on the other side of which was this natural setting where all these chimps were.
The judicial action could force the university, which is believed to be holding the chimps, to release the primates, and could sway additional judges to do the same with other research animals.
And 40 genes involved in these nine schizophrenia - related pathways also differed much more between chimps and humans than genes associated with the other 12.
«NIH's chimp decision just put it more in line with the regulations in other countries, and I hope that Poolesville was just a one - off case,» he says.
By cloning the virus and producing it in the laboratory, Ertl and her colleagues say they circumvent the danger of transmitting other chimp viruses along with the adenovirus.
It is a process that occurs in nature, with chimps and lions well known for killing other males» pups.
In one test, chimps taught to count from one to nine (in return for a peanut or other treat) competed with a dozen human volunteers in monitoring numbers that turned into squares on a computer screen.
As a result, «we can't say these chimps had Alzheimer's, but we can say for sure that they are the only other species with its pathologic hallmarks.»
By applying social network analysis — the mathematical theory behind Facebook that explains how different individuals are connected — Rushmore found that high - ranking mothers and their juveniles (as well as high - ranking males) were most likely to transmit diseases to other chimps because everyone in the community wants to be with them.
In Pansy's case, zookeepers decided to allow the other chimps to stay with her as she died, while a research team, led by psychologist James Anderson of the nearby University of Stirling, observed their reactions.
However, this latest research focused on a group with a more defined social hierarchy, so it was the rank of the nearby chimps that was of more concern to those grooming, rather than the number of others nearby.
For example, each chimp should have at least 1000 square feet of outdoor space and live with no fewer than six other animals.
Consider that chimpanzees utter laughlike sounds when they are being chased by other chimps, and as with human children, the one being chased is the one who laughs.
In other places, we are told humans have 98 or 99 per cent commonality of genes with chimps.
That's because compared with other primates, humans give birth to babies with larger bodies and brains — on average, human babies are 6.1 % of their mother's body size compared with chimp babies (3.3 %) and gorilla babies (2.7 %).
Humans, gorillas and chimps also had elevated striatal serotonin, compared with other primates.
A study that compares us with other primates finds a brain region linked to social behavior that may offer a biological explanation for why humans, not chimps, produced Shakespeare, Gandhi and Einstein
A Duke study finds that low - ranking female chimps prefer to socialize with other females of similar status.
The tendency of 2 - year - old chimps to play with each other seems to make such outbreaks in chimp communities in Côte d'Ivoire much deadlier, according to a study published 18 June in PLoS One.
Humans and chimps have similar gestation periods, which are fairly long when compared with other species.
Using databases created by other labs, the Duke University scientists cross-checked areas of human DNA that had developed differences from chimp DNA with areas of DNA they expected to be important for gene regulation.
With an opening that has Herzog immodestly laying out his mission statement as wishing to discover, in a roundabout way, why it is that men are obsessed with riding their metaphorical steeds into the wild unknowns, he illustrates the conundrum with a sideswipe at mankind, equating us with ants that hold other insect species as «slaves» and wondering why chimps, despite their intellectual sophistication, decline to domesticate goats to ride them on their own existential pursuWith an opening that has Herzog immodestly laying out his mission statement as wishing to discover, in a roundabout way, why it is that men are obsessed with riding their metaphorical steeds into the wild unknowns, he illustrates the conundrum with a sideswipe at mankind, equating us with ants that hold other insect species as «slaves» and wondering why chimps, despite their intellectual sophistication, decline to domesticate goats to ride them on their own existential pursuwith riding their metaphorical steeds into the wild unknowns, he illustrates the conundrum with a sideswipe at mankind, equating us with ants that hold other insect species as «slaves» and wondering why chimps, despite their intellectual sophistication, decline to domesticate goats to ride them on their own existential pursuwith a sideswipe at mankind, equating us with ants that hold other insect species as «slaves» and wondering why chimps, despite their intellectual sophistication, decline to domesticate goats to ride them on their own existential pursuwith ants that hold other insect species as «slaves» and wondering why chimps, despite their intellectual sophistication, decline to domesticate goats to ride them on their own existential pursuits.
During this time, the stock market was sky rocketing, and my assessment (along with many others at the time) was that even a chimp could pick stocks.
Filed Under: Advocacy, Animal organizations, Asia / Pacific, Cambodia, Chimps & other primates, Dogs & cats lab animals, Feature Home Middle Left, Japan, Lab animals, Laws & politics, Mice & rats, Pacific rim, Science, Southeast Asia, USA Tagged With: PETA, Shin Nippon Biomedical Laboratories, Stop Animal Exploitation Now
Filed Under: Africa, Animal rights & welfare, Asia / Pacific, Australia & New Zealand, Behavior & health, Cats, Chimps & other primates, China, Culture & Animals, Dog health, Dogs, Dogs, Dogs & Cats, Dogs & cats, Dogs & cats, Dogs & cats lab animals, Eastern Europe, Europe, European Union, Feature Home Bottom, Humane history, India, Indian subcontinent, Isles, Lab animals, Laws & politics, Mice & rats, Rabies, Regulation, Religion & philosophy, Research & testing, Science, Scotland, United Kingdom, USA Tagged With: Adrian Burder, Clarissa Baldwin, Helmut Dungler, Julia Lewis, Merritt Clifton, Michelle Thew, National Canine Defence League
Filed Under: Advocacy, Animal organizations, Asia / Pacific, Chimps & other primates, Feature Home Bottom, Japan, Lab animals, Other species, Pacific rim, Regulation, Research & testing, Science, USA Tagged With: Merritt Clifton, Michael Budkie, Robert Gibbens, SAEN,other primates, Feature Home Bottom, Japan, Lab animals, Other species, Pacific rim, Regulation, Research & testing, Science, USA Tagged With: Merritt Clifton, Michael Budkie, Robert Gibbens, SAEN,Other species, Pacific rim, Regulation, Research & testing, Science, USA Tagged With: Merritt Clifton, Michael Budkie, Robert Gibbens, SAEN, SNBL
Filed Under: Advocacy, Animal organizations, Chimps & other primates, Feature Home Middle Right, Lab animals, Regulation, Research & testing, Sanctuaries, Science, Space research, USA Tagged With: Alpha Genesis, Frances Collins, Ham, John Paul Stapp, Merritt Clifton, Michael & Karen Budke, National Institutes of Health, SAEN
Filed Under: Africa, Animal organizations, Chimps & other primates, Feature Home Bottom, Lab animals, Liberia, Sanctuaries, Science, Sub-Saharan, USA, Wildlife Tagged With: Aaron Kellner, Alfred M. Prince, Betsy Brotman, LEMSIP, Merritt Clifton, Michael Budkie, New York Blood Center, SAEN, Vilab II
Filed Under: Advocacy, Animal organizations, Cats, Central Europe, Chimps & other primates, Culture & Animals, Dogs, Dogs & Cats, Dogs & cats lab animals, Europe, Feature Home Bottom, Food, Germany, Global, Horses & Farmed Animals, Lab animals, Laws & politics, Mice & rats, Netherlands, Obits & Memorials, Obituaries (human), Population control, Population control, Regulation, Religion & philosophy, Science, Shelters, USA, Vegetarians & vegans, Vegetarians & vegans Tagged With: Coby Siegenthaler, Hans Siegenthaler, Lorraine Blake Roth, Lynette Shanley, Merritt Clifton, Tammy Sue Kirkpatrick
Filed Under: Animal control, Animal organizations, Chimps & other primates, Disasters, Dogs, Dogs & Cats, Feature Home Bottom, Lab animals, Sanctuaries, Science, Shelters, USA Tagged With: Jennifer Salinas, Jessica Dougherty, Merritt Clifton, Sue Cave, Wayne Pacelle
Filed Under: Advocacy, Africa, Africa, African species, African wildlife, Animal organizations, Asia, Asia / Pacific, Australia & New Zealand, Chimps & other primates, China, Conservation, DRC, Endangered species, Europe, Feature Home Bottom, Hunted species, Isles, Kenya, Lab animals, Obits & Memorials, Obituaries (human), Organizations, Other animals & science topics, Poaching & trafficking, Science, Southeast Asia, Sub-Saharan, United Kingdom, USA, Wildlife, Wildlife Tagged With: Colin Groves, Katherine Buri, Lynette Shanley, Merritt Clifton, Richard Leakey, Shirley Mcother primates, China, Conservation, DRC, Endangered species, Europe, Feature Home Bottom, Hunted species, Isles, Kenya, Lab animals, Obits & Memorials, Obituaries (human), Organizations, Other animals & science topics, Poaching & trafficking, Science, Southeast Asia, Sub-Saharan, United Kingdom, USA, Wildlife, Wildlife Tagged With: Colin Groves, Katherine Buri, Lynette Shanley, Merritt Clifton, Richard Leakey, Shirley McOther animals & science topics, Poaching & trafficking, Science, Southeast Asia, Sub-Saharan, United Kingdom, USA, Wildlife, Wildlife Tagged With: Colin Groves, Katherine Buri, Lynette Shanley, Merritt Clifton, Richard Leakey, Shirley McGreal
OTHER attractions include Kaapsehoop Horse Trails; Chimp Eden, Reptile Park at Perry's Bridge, Big Swing at Graskop, Zipline with Skyway Trails; Hoedspruit Research and Breeding Centre; Moholoholo Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre; Sudwala Caves; Silk Farm and Weavery; Hot Air Ballooning with «Balloons Over Africa».
She became interested in a list that Robert Yerkes, whose studies of chimpanzees and other apes in the 1920s led to the first primate laboratory in the U.S., had created of the chimps he had worked with.
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