After years of terror, abuse, misfortune and destruction of his body, but not of his spirity, the chimpanzee Jaybee has arrived at his new home in Florida, together with 9 of his best friends.
Jaybee is the symbol of humankind insanity against his non-human brothers. But his resistance and his decision of being alive and strong to deal with all the difficulties allowed his and his friendsω rescue. A report by CNN showed to the world his arrival at Fort Pierce Sanctuary.
Elephants, gorillas and chimps hold out in Cameroon’s largest protected landscape
WWF research has revealed that the population of elephants, gorillas and chimpanzees in and around two national parks (Boumba Bek and Nki) in Cameroon has remained relatively stable since 2016. Conservationists celebrate, but continue to warn about the threats still facing wild populations.
A recent study by Johns Hopkins University shows that bonobos are capable of intuiting the ignorance of others, an ability previously thought to be exclusively human. This capacity is called "Theory of Mind" and was demonstrated by bonobos living at the Ape Initiative, a non-profit research and education organization in the United States.
Today marks 64 years of the first chimpanzee in space
Exactly 64 years ago, three-year-old Ham was forced to become the first chimpanzee to travel into space. Save the Chimps Sanctuary honors Ham and his involuntary sacrifice, remembering that it was the fate of the chimpanzees in the US Air Force that inspired the founding of the Sanctuary.
Chimpanzees choose stone tools like early human ancestors from 2.5 million years ago
A new study published in the Journal of Human Evolution has shown remarkable similarities between how modern chimpanzees and early human ancestors pick tools, giving fresh insights into the evolution of tool use. The scientists watched chimps in Bossou, Guinea, using a hammer to hit nuts and an anvil to hold them steady.
Wild chimpanzees adapt genetically to different habitats
The study's findings have implications for conservation, suggesting that changes in climate and in land use result in different effects on chimpanzee populations. While rainforest degradation could be a danger mostly for forest chimps, habitat changes that increase malaria pressure could danger woodland-savannah groups.
Katai and Sansão: orangutans in captivity in Brazil
Female orangutan Katai is the only resident of the species in a sanctuary in Brazil. Sansão lives alone in the São Paulo zoo for years. A lawsuit requests Sansão to be transferred to the sanctuary, aiming to improve both orangutan’s…
Meet the beautiful Katai! The female orangutan was born in 1985 in a German zoo and is a Sumatra/Borneo hybrid. Since 2010, she has been one of the residents of the Anami Institute's Great Apes Sanctuary, in Paraná.
Throughout her life in the circus, Lucy gave birth to several children, but had no chance of becoming a mother. The babies were snatched from her on the day they were born, probably to be sold.
Lucy is a docile female and very zealous with her children. During her life in the circus, she had several puppies, but no opportunity to raise them, as they were taken from her the same day they were born. With her arrival at Anami, this reality changed. Lucy can raise Noel, her youngest son.
"Johny was the beginning of everything, of a struggle that will never die." The Starostik couple took care of a baby chimp rejected at birth in a zoo and created a suitable place for welfare in captivity.
Born in a zoo on May 20, 2000, Johny was rejected by his mother. At five months old, he was received by the Starostik couple, living with them in their house until he was one year old, as he needed special care, such as a bottle every two hours.