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Tip
Sheet: Science & Technology

Tip sheets highlight timely news and events at Washington University in St. Louis. For more information on any of the stories below or for assistance in arranging interviews, please see the contact information listed with each story. For comments on the Science & Technology news tips service, please contact the editor, Tony Fitzpatrick at (314) 935-5272 or tony_fitzpatrick@aismail.wustl.edu.
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Chimpanzees with little
or no human contact found in remote African rainforest

Media assistance:
Susan Killenberg McGinn
- (314) 935-5254
Source: Crickette
Sanz - (314) 664-8363
and
Dave
Morgan (314) 664-8363
Related: Nouabale-Ndoki
National Park, Wildlife Conservation
Society
Related: Jane
Goodall Institute
Related: Wildlife
Conservation Magazine

[St.
Louis, Mo., March 2003] - It's been called "The Last Place on Earth"
by National Geographic magazine, and Time describes
it as the "Last Eden."
 |
Michael Nichols/National Geographic Photo courtesy of National Geographic
All rights reserved. |
|
This photo of an adult female with her infant son in the Goualougo Triangle was taken during their first contact with humans. The researchers said that the chimpanzees had relaxed and begun to rest in their presence. |
The
Goualougo Triangle, nestled between
two rivers in a Central African
rain forest, is so remote that
primate researchers who traveled
34 miles, mostly by foot, from
the nearest village through dense
forests and swampland to get there,
have discovered a rare find: chimpanzees
that have had very little or no
contact at all with humans.
The chimpanzees' behavior when
first coming in contact with the
researchers was a telltale sign
of lack of human exposure -- the
chimpanzees didn't run and hide.
Unlike chimpanzees in the zoo
that seem to appreciate being
the center of human attention,
chimpanzees in the wild need to
be habituated to the presence
of humans, a process that can
take several years.
Dave Morgan, a field researcher
with the Wildlife Conservation
Society, Republic of Congo, and
Crickette Sanz, a doctoral candidate
in anthropology in Arts & Sciences
at Washington University in St.
Louis, report their study of "Naïve
Encounters With Chimpanzees in
the Goualougo Triangle" in the
April 2003 issue of the International
Journal of Primatology.
During two field seasons in the
Goualougo Triangle (February-December
1999 and June 2000-June 2001),
Morgan and Sanz encountered chimpanzees
on 218 different occasions, totaling
365 hours of direct observation.
Their goal, as with other researchers
at various field sites in Africa,
was to directly observe the full
repertoire of chimpanzee behavior,
which includes eating meat, sharing
food, grooming, mating and using
tools, such as large pounding
sticks to break open bee hives
and leaf sponges to gather water.
During Morgan and Sanz's first
five minutes observing individual
chimpanzees at their field site,
curiosity was the most common
response the researchers recorded
from 84 percent of the chimpanzees.
The curious responses from the
chimpanzees included staring at
the human observers, crouching
and moving closer to get a better
view of them, slapping tree trunks
or throwing branches down to elicit
a response, and making inquisitive
vocalizations.
"Such an overwhelmingly curious
response to the arrival of researchers
had never been reported from another
chimpanzee study site," says Sanz.
"Researchers have occasionally
described encounters with apes
who showed curious behaviors toward
them. However, these encounters
were rare and usually consisted
of only a few individuals."
 |
Michael Nichols/National Geographic Photo courtesy of National Geographic
All rights reserved. |
|
This photo of an adult female with her infant son in the Goualougo
Triangle was taken as they descend to the ground, departing
from where they had their first contact with humans. |
She
says that chimpanzees at these
other study sites most often fled
from human observers during their
initial contacts. Those researchers
only had glimpses of individual
chimpanzees as they rapidly departed.
Researchers have dedicated years
at other field sites to habituating
wild chimpanzees to human presence
so that the chimpanzees regard
the humans in their midst as neutral
elements not to be feared. Morgan
and Sanz often times were accepted
at first meeting.
"Behaviors such as tool use and
relaxed social interactions were
only seen after years of patient
habituation efforts," Morgan says
of the other field studies, including
Jane Goodall's site in the Gombe
Stream National Park in East Africa.
"Yet these behaviors were sometimes
observed during our initial contacts
with chimpanzees in the Goualougo
Triangle.
"And many of our initial contacts
lasted for more than two hours
-- some up to seven hours -- and
ended only when we chose to leave
the chimpanzees to continue our
surveys. Often times when we were
leaving the chimpanzees, they
would follow us through the forest
canopy."
Often the chimpanzees continued
to exhibit behaviors indicating
their naïveté toward humans
after their initial curious responses.
Morgan and Sanz define "naïve"
contacts as those in which the
chimpanzees in a group showed
interest in their observers throughout
an entire encounter, other chimpanzees
joined the group being observed,
and they stayed for a relatively
prolonged time, with the average
encounter lasting 136 minutes.
These "naïve" contacts accounted
for 69 percent of all chimpanzee
encounters.
Other types of encounters occurred,
Sanz notes, but much less frequently.
Of the 218 encounters, during
12 percent of them the chimpanzees
showed signs of nervousness, including
hiding behind vegetation or climbing
higher in the canopy; 11 percent
departed; and eight percent ignored
the observers.
"The high frequency of curious
responses to our arrival and the
naïve contacts suggest that
the chimpanzees had had little
or no contact with humans," says
Sanz. "They certainly had not
formed negative associations between
human presence and potential threats
such as poaching, hunting and
habitat destruction.
Preserving a pristine
habitat

"During our research presence
in the Goualougo Triangle, we've
never encountered any other humans
or even their traces, such as
villages, campsites or paths,"
adds Sanz. "Because of the low
human density in northern Congo
and the remote location of the
Goualougo Triangle, it is unlikely
that these chimpanzees had ever
encountered humans."
The study site's history substantiates this conclusion, says Morgan.
People residing in Bomassa village, the closest village at 34 miles
away, claim that they had not visited the Goualougo Triangle until
initial surveys were conducted in 1993 by Michael Fay, a conservationist
with the New-York based Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS). At the
time, Fay, who received his doctorate in anthropology from Washington
University in 1997, was part of a WCS team documenting the importance
of the Goualougo Triangle to conservation and science.
The 100-square-mile Goualougo
Triangle is on the southern end
of the Nouabalé-Ndoki National
Park. When the park was created
in 1993, the Goualougo Triangle
was left out because it was a
part of a logging concession.
After discovering this naïve chimpanzee population and their
trust in humans -- as well as having had naïve contacts with
other primate species like gorillas and monkeys that would be vulnerable
to poachers and logging -- Morgan and Sanz felt an obligation to ensure
their long-term protection.
Naïve encounters with the
chimpanzees put the Goualougo
Triangle at the top of the WCS'
list of priority conservation
projects, says Morgan.
The chimpanzees' unique behavior
helped persuade Congolese government
officials and the local logging
company, which had legal rights
to the forest rich in mahogany
and other valuable hardwoods,
to preserve the pristine habitat.
In July 2001, representatives
of the WCS, Congolese government
and the logging company announced
during a news conference that
the Goualougo Triangle was to
be annexed to the park and its
intact ecosystem and undisturbed
animal populations would be protected
forever.
Goodall visits
site

"Dave and Crickette's work on
this chimpanzee population is
simply amazing," says renowned
primatologist Robert W. Sussman,
Ph.D., a professor of anthropology
at Washington University and Sanz
and Fay's doctoral advisor. "There
is no doubt in my mind that this
research will lead to a much better
understanding of chimpanzee ecology
and behavior, and will set the
stage for data collection for
years to come. I also believe
that this research also may lead
to better models of the evolution
of human evolution because these
chimpanzees are so free from human
interference."
 |
Michael Nichols/National Geographic Photo courtesy of National Geographic
All rights reserved. |
|
This adult male in the Goualougo Triangle was photographed during the first few minutes of contact with human observers. During this encounter, the researchers observed seven chimpanzees, and all were very excited. This male is vocalizing toward the researchers and communicating with other adult males nearby. |
Jane
Goodall, considered the world's
foremost authority on chimpanzees,
also found Morgan and Sanz's discovery
of a naïve chimpanzee population
of such great interest that she
visited the site last summer.
In nearly 45 years of observing
chimpanzees' behavior in their
environment and working to gain
their trust, Goodall's visit to
Goualougo Triangle was the first
at another study site other than
her own in the forests of the
Gombe National Park.
Goodall was curious to see the
naïve chimpanzees that she
had heard showed no fear of humans
as well as interested in observing
how these chimpanzees differed
from those living at Gombe.
Within the last few years, Goodall
and other researchers have been
comparing chimpanzee behaviors
such as tool use and social traditions
that are passed on from one individual
to another through social learning.
The study of these "chimpanzee
cultures" was limited to sites
in East and West Africa, Sanz
notes, because of political instability
and logistical difficulties of
setting up long-term field sites
in Central Africa.
"Prior to the Goualougo Chimpanzee
Project," Morgan says, "there
were no sites where researchers
could conduct direct observations
of the behavior and ecology of
the central subspecies of chimpanzee
residing in the largest tracts
of undisturbed forest remaining
in equatorial Africa."
As a result of her visit to the Goualougo Triangle -- which National
Geographic magazine covered and will feature in its April 2003
issue -- Goodall has extended her conservation efforts into Central
Africa. The Jane Goodall Institute recently launched a fund-raising
"Campaign to Save the Rainforest of the Congo Basin."
After her visit to the Goualougo
Triangle, Goodall wrote to the
National Geographic Society: "This
study is of the utmost importance
-- it is the first such work to
be undertaken in a rainforest
that has not been exploited by
humans, where the chimpanzees,
initially, had never seen human
beings. Such places are becoming
increasingly rare, and the information
that has already come out of the
research is both fascinating and
important."
"It was such an honor to have
Jane Goodall in our camp," Sanz
says. "Our field site is going
on four years and her site has
been active for that many decades!
But as we enter our fourth year
in the Goualougo Triangle, we
have accomplished a lot within
a relatively short research presence,
including collecting detailed
behavioral data, and beginning
to describe the social structure
of several communities within
the study area.
"Although we will continue to census individual chimpanzees throughout
the area," Sanz continues, "we hope to habituate only a few communities
in the core of the study area. The other communities will be left
to live their lives free from human contact."
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