Cargando…

Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) in U.S. Zoos, Sanctuaries, and Research Facilities: A Survey-Based Comparison of Species-Typical Behaviors

SIMPLE SUMMARY: A survey was sent to zoos, research facilities, and sanctuaries which housed chimpanzees. The behavioral profiles of 1122 chimpanzees were collected for this survey. Data collected included information about the animals’ age, sex, social group size, rearing history, and enclosure as...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Clay, Andrea W., Ross, Stephen R., Lambeth, Susan, Vazquez, Maribel, Breaux, Sarah, Pietsch, Rhonda, Fultz, Amy, Lammey, Michael, Jacobson, Sarah L., Perlman, Jaine E., Bloomsmith, Mollie A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9854616/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36670791
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13020251
_version_ 1784873165114048512
author Clay, Andrea W.
Ross, Stephen R.
Lambeth, Susan
Vazquez, Maribel
Breaux, Sarah
Pietsch, Rhonda
Fultz, Amy
Lammey, Michael
Jacobson, Sarah L.
Perlman, Jaine E.
Bloomsmith, Mollie A.
author_facet Clay, Andrea W.
Ross, Stephen R.
Lambeth, Susan
Vazquez, Maribel
Breaux, Sarah
Pietsch, Rhonda
Fultz, Amy
Lammey, Michael
Jacobson, Sarah L.
Perlman, Jaine E.
Bloomsmith, Mollie A.
author_sort Clay, Andrea W.
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: A survey was sent to zoos, research facilities, and sanctuaries which housed chimpanzees. The behavioral profiles of 1122 chimpanzees were collected for this survey. Data collected included information about the animals’ age, sex, social group size, rearing history, and enclosure as well as information about each animal’s behavior. Each respondent was asked to indicate if certain behaviors had been observed in each chimpanzee over the prior two years. Species typical behaviors (STBs) were queried, including copulation, tool-use, nest-building, and social grooming. Tool-use was reported to be present for 94.3% of the sample, active grooming for 85.7%, copulation for 68.3% and nest-building for 58.9%. Male chimpanzees who were not reared by their conspecific mother were most likely to have deficits in STBs, and female chimpanzees who were mother-reared were generally the most likely to engage in STBs. ABSTRACT: A survey was sent to zoos, research facilities, and sanctuaries which housed chimpanzees. Data collected included information about 1122 chimpanzees’ age, sex, social group-size, rearing history, and enclosure. Respondents were also asked to indicate if certain behaviors had been observed in each chimpanzee over the prior two years. Species- typical behaviors (STBs) were queried, including copulation, tool-use, nest-building, and social grooming. Tool-use was reported present for 94.3% of the sample (n = 982), active social grooming for 85.7% (n = 1121), copulation for 68.3% (n = 863) and nest-building for 58.9% (n = 982). Of the subjects for whom we had data regarding all four STBs (n = 860), 45.6% were reported to engage in all four. Logistic regression analyses using forward Wald criteria were conducted to determine the best model for each STB based on the predictors of age, sex, rearing history, group-size, facility-type, and a sex-by-rearing interaction. The best model for copulation (χ(2)(6) = 124.62, p < 0.001) included rearing, group-size, facility-type, and the sex-by-rearing interaction. Chimpanzees were more likely to copulate if they were mother-reared, in larger groups, living in research facilities, and, if not mother-reared (NOTMR), more likely to copulate if they were female. The best model for tool-use retained the predictors of age category, facility-type, and sex-by-rearing (χ(2)(5) = 55.78, p < 0.001). Chimpanzees were more likely to use tools if they were adult, living in research facilities, and if NOTMR, were female. The best model for nest-building included facility-type and rearing (χ(2)(3) = 205.71, p < 0.001). Chimpanzees were more likely to build nests if they were MR and if they were living in zoos or in sanctuaries. The best model for active social grooming retained the predictors of age, sex, rearing, and type of facility (χ(2)(6) = 102.15, p < 0.001). Chimpanzees were more likely to engage in active social grooming if they were immature, female, mother-reared, and living in zoos. This research provides a basic behavioral profile for many chimpanzees living under human care in the United States and allows us to determine potential methods for improving the welfare of these and future chimpanzees in this population.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9854616
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-98546162023-01-21 Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) in U.S. Zoos, Sanctuaries, and Research Facilities: A Survey-Based Comparison of Species-Typical Behaviors Clay, Andrea W. Ross, Stephen R. Lambeth, Susan Vazquez, Maribel Breaux, Sarah Pietsch, Rhonda Fultz, Amy Lammey, Michael Jacobson, Sarah L. Perlman, Jaine E. Bloomsmith, Mollie A. Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: A survey was sent to zoos, research facilities, and sanctuaries which housed chimpanzees. The behavioral profiles of 1122 chimpanzees were collected for this survey. Data collected included information about the animals’ age, sex, social group size, rearing history, and enclosure as well as information about each animal’s behavior. Each respondent was asked to indicate if certain behaviors had been observed in each chimpanzee over the prior two years. Species typical behaviors (STBs) were queried, including copulation, tool-use, nest-building, and social grooming. Tool-use was reported to be present for 94.3% of the sample, active grooming for 85.7%, copulation for 68.3% and nest-building for 58.9%. Male chimpanzees who were not reared by their conspecific mother were most likely to have deficits in STBs, and female chimpanzees who were mother-reared were generally the most likely to engage in STBs. ABSTRACT: A survey was sent to zoos, research facilities, and sanctuaries which housed chimpanzees. Data collected included information about 1122 chimpanzees’ age, sex, social group-size, rearing history, and enclosure. Respondents were also asked to indicate if certain behaviors had been observed in each chimpanzee over the prior two years. Species- typical behaviors (STBs) were queried, including copulation, tool-use, nest-building, and social grooming. Tool-use was reported present for 94.3% of the sample (n = 982), active social grooming for 85.7% (n = 1121), copulation for 68.3% (n = 863) and nest-building for 58.9% (n = 982). Of the subjects for whom we had data regarding all four STBs (n = 860), 45.6% were reported to engage in all four. Logistic regression analyses using forward Wald criteria were conducted to determine the best model for each STB based on the predictors of age, sex, rearing history, group-size, facility-type, and a sex-by-rearing interaction. The best model for copulation (χ(2)(6) = 124.62, p < 0.001) included rearing, group-size, facility-type, and the sex-by-rearing interaction. Chimpanzees were more likely to copulate if they were mother-reared, in larger groups, living in research facilities, and, if not mother-reared (NOTMR), more likely to copulate if they were female. The best model for tool-use retained the predictors of age category, facility-type, and sex-by-rearing (χ(2)(5) = 55.78, p < 0.001). Chimpanzees were more likely to use tools if they were adult, living in research facilities, and if NOTMR, were female. The best model for nest-building included facility-type and rearing (χ(2)(3) = 205.71, p < 0.001). Chimpanzees were more likely to build nests if they were MR and if they were living in zoos or in sanctuaries. The best model for active social grooming retained the predictors of age, sex, rearing, and type of facility (χ(2)(6) = 102.15, p < 0.001). Chimpanzees were more likely to engage in active social grooming if they were immature, female, mother-reared, and living in zoos. This research provides a basic behavioral profile for many chimpanzees living under human care in the United States and allows us to determine potential methods for improving the welfare of these and future chimpanzees in this population. MDPI 2023-01-10 /pmc/articles/PMC9854616/ /pubmed/36670791 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13020251 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Clay, Andrea W.
Ross, Stephen R.
Lambeth, Susan
Vazquez, Maribel
Breaux, Sarah
Pietsch, Rhonda
Fultz, Amy
Lammey, Michael
Jacobson, Sarah L.
Perlman, Jaine E.
Bloomsmith, Mollie A.
Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) in U.S. Zoos, Sanctuaries, and Research Facilities: A Survey-Based Comparison of Species-Typical Behaviors
title Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) in U.S. Zoos, Sanctuaries, and Research Facilities: A Survey-Based Comparison of Species-Typical Behaviors
title_full Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) in U.S. Zoos, Sanctuaries, and Research Facilities: A Survey-Based Comparison of Species-Typical Behaviors
title_fullStr Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) in U.S. Zoos, Sanctuaries, and Research Facilities: A Survey-Based Comparison of Species-Typical Behaviors
title_full_unstemmed Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) in U.S. Zoos, Sanctuaries, and Research Facilities: A Survey-Based Comparison of Species-Typical Behaviors
title_short Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) in U.S. Zoos, Sanctuaries, and Research Facilities: A Survey-Based Comparison of Species-Typical Behaviors
title_sort chimpanzees (pan troglodytes) in u.s. zoos, sanctuaries, and research facilities: a survey-based comparison of species-typical behaviors
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9854616/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36670791
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13020251
work_keys_str_mv AT clayandreaw chimpanzeespantroglodytesinuszoossanctuariesandresearchfacilitiesasurveybasedcomparisonofspeciestypicalbehaviors
AT rossstephenr chimpanzeespantroglodytesinuszoossanctuariesandresearchfacilitiesasurveybasedcomparisonofspeciestypicalbehaviors
AT lambethsusan chimpanzeespantroglodytesinuszoossanctuariesandresearchfacilitiesasurveybasedcomparisonofspeciestypicalbehaviors
AT vazquezmaribel chimpanzeespantroglodytesinuszoossanctuariesandresearchfacilitiesasurveybasedcomparisonofspeciestypicalbehaviors
AT breauxsarah chimpanzeespantroglodytesinuszoossanctuariesandresearchfacilitiesasurveybasedcomparisonofspeciestypicalbehaviors
AT pietschrhonda chimpanzeespantroglodytesinuszoossanctuariesandresearchfacilitiesasurveybasedcomparisonofspeciestypicalbehaviors
AT fultzamy chimpanzeespantroglodytesinuszoossanctuariesandresearchfacilitiesasurveybasedcomparisonofspeciestypicalbehaviors
AT lammeymichael chimpanzeespantroglodytesinuszoossanctuariesandresearchfacilitiesasurveybasedcomparisonofspeciestypicalbehaviors
AT jacobsonsarahl chimpanzeespantroglodytesinuszoossanctuariesandresearchfacilitiesasurveybasedcomparisonofspeciestypicalbehaviors
AT perlmanjainee chimpanzeespantroglodytesinuszoossanctuariesandresearchfacilitiesasurveybasedcomparisonofspeciestypicalbehaviors
AT bloomsmithmolliea chimpanzeespantroglodytesinuszoossanctuariesandresearchfacilitiesasurveybasedcomparisonofspeciestypicalbehaviors