Chen Emma, Pipolo Giulia, Crailsheim Dietmar, Morimoto Juliano
School of Biological Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK.
Research Department, Fundación MONA, Girona, Spain.
Am J Primatol. 2025 Jan;87(1):e23715. doi: 10.1002/ajp.23715.
Human fascination with chimpanzees has driven extensive research on the species, but also led to exploitation by private owners and entertainment industries. These animals often suffer species-specific inadequate conditions, which can result in the development and display of abnormal behaviors even after rescue. These behaviors highlight the importance for zoos and sanctuaries to actively prevent worsening the effects of previous inadequate treatment by providing apes with social and stimulating environments that support their recovery. We conducted a 2-month behavioral survey on two groups of former pet and entertainment chimpanzees (n = 10) at the Fundación MONA sanctuary in Spain. From 116 h of instantaneous scan observations, we documented individual abnormal behaviors (e.g., self-poking, overgrooming, self-scratching). We assessed the association between the occurrence of these behaviors and individuals' origin, early history, age at rescue, and pre-rescue social conditions. We found no significant difference in the frequency of abnormal behavior between pet and entertainer chimpanzees, and between individuals born in captivity versus in the wild. Moreover, we observed that the frequency of abnormal behaviors increased with age at rescue for previously isolated individuals, but the correlation disappeared for those socially housed pre-rescue. These findings suggest that early social isolation and a late age at rescue may impose long-term changes on chimpanzees' behavior, and they emphasize the importance of accounting for age at rescue and previous housing conditions in care management and rehabilitation procedures.
人类对黑猩猩的痴迷推动了对该物种的广泛研究,但也导致了私人所有者和娱乐行业对它们的剥削。这些动物常常处于特定物种的不适当环境中,即使在获救后也可能导致异常行为的发展和表现。这些行为凸显了动物园和保护区积极预防因先前不适当待遇造成的影响进一步恶化的重要性,即要为猿类提供有助于其恢复的社交和刺激性环境。我们在西班牙莫纳基金会保护区对两组曾作为宠物和用于娱乐的黑猩猩(n = 10)进行了为期两个月的行为调查。通过116小时的即时扫描观察,我们记录了个体的异常行为(如自我戳刺、过度梳理毛发、自我抓挠)。我们评估了这些行为的发生与个体的来源、早期经历、获救时的年龄以及获救前的社交状况之间的关联。我们发现,宠物黑猩猩和用于娱乐的黑猩猩之间,以及圈养出生与野生出生的个体之间,异常行为的频率没有显著差异。此外,我们观察到,对于先前被隔离的个体,异常行为的频率随获救时的年龄增加而上升,但对于那些在获救前群居的个体,这种相关性消失了。这些发现表明,早期的社会隔离和较晚的获救年龄可能会给黑猩猩的行为带来长期变化,它们强调了在护理管理和康复程序中考虑获救时的年龄和先前的饲养条件的重要性。