Jane Goodall - it is time to do more to protect apes
Category: Uncategorized | Date: Oct 27 2008 | By: baraza
I was really pleased to see Dr Jane Goodall sticking her neck out to remind the world that we need to do more to save great apes. In an article published in the Calgary Herald Thursday, October 23, 2008, she says
“In the couple of months since the historic Spanish parliament resolution granting certain rights to great apes, the ensuing debate has taken a wrong turn. As commentators have become mired in the nuances of what rights are appropriate for apes or any other non-human animal, we have lost sight of the central concern — that we continue to use great apes in invasive research, as well as entertainment and advertising, in ways that are unnecessarily harmful and often downright cruel to these amazing creatures.
Like Spain, other countries have recognized this fact. Australia, Austria, Holland, Japan, New Zealand, Sweden and the United Kingdom have banned or severely restricted invasive research on great apes. While we may not agree on how to get there, there’s a growing consensus around the world that we need to go in this direction.
Over the past century, a wealth of information has been uncovered regarding the behaviour and biology of great apes. We now know with absolute certainty that great apes share many of the same psychological, social, and emotional characteristics as humans.
Taking these findings into account, we can no longer turn a blind eye to their inhumane treatment.
For years great apes have been used in inappropriate and irresponsible ways. Invasive research on great apes continues, despite the suffering it inflicts and the growing abundance of alternative non-animal testing methods. The use of great apes in the entertainment and advertising industry also persists, regardless of the heavy toll it exacts on both captive and wild great apes. What most people do not realize is that performing apes must be taken from their mothers as infants. The premature separation of an infant from its mother can often lead to long-term social and psychological damage. Additionally, entertainment apes have a very short shelf life in the industry. They only remain manageable until they mature, around the age of eight, yet captive great apes can live from 50 to 60 years. Once performing apes are no longer manageable on the entertainment set, they often end up in inappropriate and inhumane living conditions — a roadside zoo, a biomedical research lab, or a breeder compound where the cycle is repeated.
Researchers have found that people who are accustomed to seeing chimpanzees mimicking humans in television programs, advertising and film may be misled into believing that chimpanzees are not endangered.
The misconception that chimpanzees are not endangered negates efforts to raise public awareness and commitments toward their conservation, a consequence that we cannot afford at such a critical juncture. For chimpanzees and all the great apes, once abundant, are now on the verge of extinction. This is due in large measure to the loss of forest habitat from commercial logging, mining and biofuel operations, as well as growing numbers of people in great ape ranges who lack basic needs.
The Spanish parliament’s action serves as a reminder that we must press forward to protect the natural habitats of great apes in Africa and Asia. There is so much to be done.”
UNEP is helping by announcing that 2009 will be the Year of the Gorilla under the Convention of Migratory species.
At WidlifeDirect we will also draw increasing attention to the conservation needs of our closest relatives - a conservation need that is badly underfunded globally, and where conservationists are working under extraordinarily difficult conditions. We hope you will support our ape projects including the Orangutan Foundation in Indonesia, Lola ya Bonobo bonobo sanctuary in Kinshasa, JACK a chimapanzee rescue center in the DR Congo, the Mountain Gorilla Veterinary Project, the Virunga National Park, the Tacugama wildlife sanctuary in Sierra Leone, and Limbe Wildlife Center in Cameroon where rescued gorillas are being cared for.
Tags: bonobos, chimpanzees, Gorillas, Great apes, Jane Goodall
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2 Responses to “Jane Goodall - it is time to do more to protect apes”
Lucia Cristiana, Brasil, on 27 Oct 2008
Thank you for this message. Dr Jane Goodall deserves a Nobel Prize for her work with apes over four decades, first like primatologist research, and then like conservationist, the best around the World. God save the gentle Dame of British Empire.
Elizabeth, on 03 Nov 2008
Hi Lucia
I agree! Dr. Goodall certainly does deserve the Nobel Peace Prize!
I saw Dr. Goodall in person at the “Leaky Prize Public Forum for Primatology and Scientific Roundtable,” in San Francisco this Saturday. She spoke along with a number of other eminent primatologists.
Sadly, despite the threat of imminent extinction of our close relatives, the apes, other than Dr. Goodall and Dr. Anthony Nsubuga, most of the scientists seemed overly focused on areas of research such as comparative ape/human behavior and the new field of genomics.
When will they wake up and smell the coffee? They are so enamored with their areas of interest that they don’t seem to realize that conservation, environmental protection and mass education of human populations need to supersede all other interests for now.
The chimpanzees and gorillas in Africa have, I think, an estimated forty years before they will be extinct if we can’t stop deforestation, the bush meat industry, the refugee crises etc. Dr. Goodall also made a point to say that the orangutans and siamangs in southeast Asia may have even less time than the chimps and gorillas.
Dr.Goodall is in her senior years now but travels an average of 300 days a year speaking about the threats facing chimpanzees, environmental crises, and her hope that we human beings will solve the problems we have inflicted on the Earth.
You may want to check out her website at http://www.janegoodall.org. Maybe you will get involved. Dr. Goodall and her organizations such as “Roots and Shoots” run teaching programs and she a need for teachers. Maybe you can get involved. I hope I can one day.
All the Best
Liz
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