| Literature DB >> 25379223 |
Stacy M Lopresti-Goodman1, Marjanne Kameka1, Ashlynn Dube1.
Abstract
Many orphaned chimpanzees whose mothers are illegally killed for their meat (bushmeat) in Africa are sold as pets or kept caged at hotels and businesses to attract tourists. As a result of being separated from their mothers and other chimpanzees at an early age, and spending years in impoverished captive conditions, some of these individuals engage in abnormal behaviors, including stereotypically scratching at their flesh and repetitively rocking back and forth. This paper presents case studies of Poco and Safari, two chimpanzees who were rescued by sanctuaries after living alone on display for humans at businesses for the first 7 to 8 years of their lives. Decades after their rescue, they still engage in stereotypical behaviors as a result of the psychological and physical trauma they endured early on. This paper combines data from in depth interviews with caregivers and direct observations of abnormal behaviors to assess psychological distress in captive-living chimpanzees. Our results highlight some lesser known harms of the bushmeat trade and the detrimental life-long consequences that keeping chimpanzees as "pets" can have on their mental health.Entities:
Keywords: abnormal behaviors; bushmeat; chimpanzees; post-traumatic stress disorder; stereotypical behaviors
Year: 2012 PMID: 25379223 PMCID: PMC4217614 DOI: 10.3390/bs3010001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Sci (Basel) ISSN: 2076-328X
Composition of Poco and Safari’s Group.
| Age Category | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Infants and Juveniles | Adolescents and Young Adults | Prime, Mature, and Old Adults | |
| 1–7 years | 8–15 years | 16 years + | |
| - | 5 | 4 | |
| 2 | 3 | 7 | |
Figure 1Poco at Sweetwaters Chimpanzee Sanctuary in Kenya in 2011.
Figure 2(a) A cage similar to the one that Poco lived in at the service station in Burundi until he was rescued in 1989; (b) Poco spends most of his time walking upright and bipedally as a result of the damage incurred to his back from living in such a tiny cage.
Figure 3Safari at Sweetwaters Chimpanzee Sanctuary in 2011.
Figure 4(a) Poco sticking a sharp acacia thorn into the side of his face; (b) Poco flipping his upper lip at tourists observing him from the Visitor Center at Sweetwaters.
Poco’s Distribution of Normal and Abnormal Behaviors in Each Behavioral Context.
| Behavioral Context | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human Oriented (19%) | Solitary (59%) | Affiliating (14%) | Interacting (8%) | |
| 80 (65) | 295 (79) | 30 (35) | 13 (25) | |
| 43 (35) | 80 (21) | 56 (65) | 40 (75) | |
| 123 | 375 | 86 | 53 | |
Note: * Twenty-three of the 660 total observations were coded as “missed” observations and therefore did not factor into the percentage of time spent in each behavioral context. Data within the table are represented as N Observations (% of Observations in that Behavioral Context), while the category labels indicate (% of Total Observations).
Figure 5Poco sitting in a depressed, hunched posture.
Figure 6Safari poking himself with a stick in the arm.
Safari’s Distribution of Normal and Abnormal Behaviors in Each Behavioral Context.
| Behavioral Context | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human Oriented (9.5%) | Solitary (46%) | Affiliating (28%) | Interacting (16.5%) | |
| 23 (37) | 163 (55) | 56 (31) | 38 (36) | |
| 39 (63) | 134 (45) | 126 (69) | 69 (64) | |
| 62 | 297 | 182 | 77 | |
Note: * Twelve of the 660 total observations were coded as “missed” observations and therefore did not factor into the percentage of time spent in each behavioral context. Data within the table are represented as N Observations (% of Observations in that Behavioral Context), while the category labels indicate (% of Total Observations).