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While
foraging through an area, a chimp feeds on a variety of fruits.
A few days later, the seeds pass through the digestive tract and
germinate far away from the parent plant. This method of seed dispersal
insures healthy plant diversity within the habitat and creates shelter
and food for other forest dwellers, including native peoples.
Because
chimps closely resemble humans, studying their behavior and biology
may provide great insight for solving the mysteries of our own ancestry
and social development.
There
are only four subspecies of chimpanzee left in the wild today. Habitat
loss, poaching, and the bush meat trade are the main causes behind
chimp deaths.
Busch
Gardens is proud of its long-standing relationship with the Yerkes
Regional Primate Research Center, Emory University, Atlanta, Ga.,
the site of some of the most well-respected primate research programs
in the world. Busch Gardens has partnered with the Yerkes Center
on several primate conservation research programs including the
Tana River Primate Research Center in Southeast Kenya and in-park
behavioral research carried out by Frans de Waal, Ph.D. and his
staff at the Yerkes Center.
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