Thursday, January 8, 2009

All About Chimpanzees

Chimpanzee Quizto Print-outChimpanzees are great apes that are closely related to humans.
These intelligent primates live in a variety of environments in western and central Africa. Because of the rapid deforestation of their habitats, chimpanzees are an endangered species. ANATOMYChimpanzees have very long arms (the arms are longer than the legs), and a short body.
Hair and Skin:Chimpanzees are covered with black hair on most of their body (except their fingers, palms, armpits, and bottoms of their feet). Baby chimpanzees have very pale skin in the areas that have no hair and a white tuft of hair on the rump.
Senses:Chimpanzees have senses very similar to ours, including hearing, sight, smell, taste, and touch.
Face:Chimpanzees have a slight brow ridge, large ears, small nostrils, and an elongated snout. They are capable of many expressions. Chimpanzees have a hairless face except for a short, white beard in both male and female adults. Some adult females become bald.
Hands and Feet:Chimpanzees' hands are very much like ours; they have four long fingers plus an opposable thumb (the thumb is shorter than the other fingers). Their feet have five toes, including an opposable big toe. Chimpanzees can grasp things with both their hands and their feet. SIZEMale chimpanzees are larger than the females.

DIET Chimpanzees are omnivores (eating plants and meat). They forage for food in the forests during the day, eating leaves, fruit, seeds, tree bark, plant bulbs, tender plant shoots, and flowers. They also eat termites, ants, and small animals (they have even been known to eat young monkeys). Chimpanzees drink water, often by using a chewed leaf as a sponge to sop up the water. INTELLIGENCE AND TOOLSChimpanzees are very intelligent and can learn extremely complex tasks.

Tools:Chimpanzees often use tools in the wild. They have been observed using sticks to obtain ants and termites to eat and to scare away intruders. They also use chewed-up leaves like a sponge to sop up water to drink.

BEHAVIOR AND SOCIAL HABITSGroups of Chimpanzees:Chimpanzees are social animals that are active during the day (they are diurnal). They live in small, stable groups (called communities or unit groups) of about 40-60 individuals. Smaller subgroups of 6-7 chimps stay together for a while, with the membership changing over time.

Grooming:Grooming one another (cleaning the hair of another chimp) is a major occupation among chimpanzees in a group.

Sleeping Nests:Each evening, chimpanzees construct a fresh "sleeping nest" in the trees where they will curl up and sleep. These bowl-shaped nests are made out of leaves and other plant material. Nests are only shared by a mother and her nursing offspring. Play:Young chimpanzees play a lot, learning skills they will use as an adult. They practice using tools, making sleeping nests, climbing, wrestling, etc. COMMUNICATION AND VOCALIZATION Communication is used to teach the young the many skills that they need to survive, and to convey information to other chimpanzees about food, social relationships, distress, mating, etc.

Sounds:Chimpanzees have a complex system of communication. They have cries that warn other chimps of danger in the area; their danger call can be heard through the forest for about 2 miles (3 km). When there is an abundance of food, chimps bark loudly to call the others in their group to a feast.

Gestures:Chimpanzees also use many gestures to indicate needs and emotions. Chimps will beg other chimps for food by approaching them with open hands. Friends may hold hands, hug, or even kiss. A worried chimp makes a lip-puckering face. A frightened chimp will bare its teeth. A smile indicates a relaxed, friendly chimp. When the lips are tightly pressed together, the chimp is ready to attack.

LOCOMOTIONChimpanzees usually walk using all fours (on the soles of feet and the knuckles of their hands). They can walk upright (when they need to use their arms to carry something), but usually don't. Chimps are also very good at climbing trees, where they spend much of their time, including when they sleep. They can swing from branch to branch in the trees (this is called brachiating).

LIFE SPANChimpanzees live about 60 years in captivity; their life span in the wild is only about 35-40 years (like most animals, they live much longer in captivity).

HABITATChimpanzees live in a wide variety of habitats, including tropical rain forests (in the forest edges and clearings), woodlands, swamp forests, and grasslands in western Africa. DISTRIBUTIONThe different subspecies of chimpanzees live in different parts of western and central Africa in 21 different countries, from the Atlantic coast to well inland. Chimpanzee populations are becoming increasingly fragmented as parts of their habitat are used by people. REPRODUCTION AND BABY CHIMPANZEES: Chimpanzees are fully grown and able to reproduce at 12-13 years old. Female chimpanzees are pregnant for about 8.5-9 months and usually have a single baby at a time; twins are rare. Female chimpanzees carefully nurture their young. Babies can grasp their mother's fur to ride on the mother's back at about 6 months. After they are weaned, chimpanzees begin to build their own sleeping nests out of vegetation and not use their mother's nest anymore. Young chimpanzees stay with their mother for about 7 years.

POPULATION COUNTS: Chimpanzee populations are decreasing; they are threatened with extinction. Population numbers are disputed. Estimates range from 100,000 to 200,000. JANE GOODALLJane Goodall is a scientist who spent most of her adult life observing chimpanzees in the wild in Gombe National Park, Tanzania ( it was then the Gombe Stream Reserve in what was then Tanganyika), Africa. Her field-work, which lasted for almost 30 years (from 1960 to 1986), has given us a tremendous amount of information about these social animals whose behavior is very similar to that of humans.

THE EVOLUTION OF CHIMPANZEES: The earliest-known primates date from about 70 million years ago (Macdonald, 1985). The greater apes (family Pongidae, gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos, and orangutans) split off from the lesser apes (family Hylobatidae, gibbons and siamangs) 20 million years ago. The chimpanzee is the animal that is closest to people genetically; people and chimps have very similar DNA (about 98% of human and chimpanzee DNA is identical). Genetic studies show that chimpanzees and humans share a common ancestor.

CLASSIFICATION: Chimpanzees belong to the:
Kingdom Animalia (all animals)
Phylum Chordata
Subphylum Vertebrata (animals with backbones)
Class Mammalia (warm-blooded animals with fur and mammary glands)
Order Primates (which is comprised of 11 families, including lemurs, monkeys, marmosets, lesser apes, great apes, and humans)
Family Pongidae (the great apes, including
gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos, and orangutans)
Genus Pan (chimpanzees and bonobos)
Species troglodytes - the Chimpanzee
Subspecies P. t. verus - the western subspecies (found in Côte d'Ivoire, plus some small populations in Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Liberia).
Subspecies P. t. troglodytes - the central subspecies (found mostly in Gabon, also from eastern Nigeria to the Ubanghi River and south to the Zaire River).
Subspecies P. t. schweinfurthi - the eastern subspecies studied by Jane Goodall (found from southern Lake Tanganyika in Tanzania, and from there northwards to Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda and southern Sudan).
Species paniscus - the Bonobo or pygmy chimp, from Zaire, along the Zaire river.

SOME INTERESTING FACTS


A B-25 bomber airplane crashed into the 79th floor of the Empire State Building on July 28, 1945.

A baboon called Jackie became a private in the South African army in World War I.

Ancient Romans at one time used human urine as an ingredient in their toothpaste.

Approximately 25,000 workers died during the building of the Panama Canal, and approximately 20,000 of them contracted malaria and yellow fever.

Approximately 40% of the U.S. paper currency in circulation was counterfeit by the end of the Civil War.

At age 18, the Queen of England was a mechanic for the British Military.

Because metal was scarce; the Oscars given out during World War II were made of plaster.

Canada's new flag, with its maple leaf design, was unfurled in 1965 in Ottawa!
Che Guevara suffered from asthma!
Cleopatra married two of her brothers.

Saturday, December 20, 2008


Hi, This is my Photo taken at IIT Mumbai Campus. I want to be an IITian.

Keeru

Saturday, November 29, 2008

MUMBAI BLASTS

Dear Friends,

This is my first post in my official blog. As a normal socialiate, my reaction to the sad incidents in this week would reflect the true feelings of the society.

As far as the vulnerability of normal public is concerned, we are vulnerable to anything under the sky. With no protection from any corner and exposed to all ills in the society, this time the attack was on the so called creamy layer. Now, we can say after this incident that every country men is at risk and can be taken for a ride.

With so much of money collected in the form of taxes, atleast a part of the money can be used for the security of Normal public life instead of spending them on protecting the lives of bureaucrats.

Request everybody to react to my comments.
Regards
D.Keshav.