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In this wonderful, richly illustrated book of the British primatologist Dr. Jane Goodall (03/04/1934) I have first seen the many beautiful photos, before I get the text of the researcher, which were written with the assistance of the Jane Goodall-Institute read have.
Goodall delivered in the course of her life a significant contribution to behavioral research on primates by long-term behavioral studies of wild chimpanzees, particularly in the "Gombe Stream Chimpanzee Reserve in Tanzania ". In 1965 she founded the Gombe Stream Research Center" and in 1976 the Jane Goodall Institute for Wildlife Research, Education in Conservation "by which they presented further research on chimpanzees secure.
After an introduction by Mary Smith and an Introduction by Jane Goodall, one can then in the work of deepening Goodall. The researcher, who came in 1960 in the rain forest of Tanzania to study chimpanzees, has already consulted during her childhood in London with the study of animals. We read how they overcame all the obstacles as a young woman to finally pursue their life task. Based on the extensive photographic material, one may know them as a child and young woman Watch and learn it well in the first Gombe expedition.
This researcher was the world made aware that any chimpanzee is an individual with its own personality, characteristics and quirks (see: p. 37). You can see Goodall on a picture that emerged in the 1960s and finds that, having successfully completed research days in the evening always worked out Your Notes on the behavior of chimpanzees and they can always do with animal observations. The pictures of the chimpanzees I studied with great pleasure.
The research that Dr. Goodall began in 1960, has been continued since then and focus on some 100 chimpanzees, living in Gombe National Park. The current research also includes long-term studies of baboons and short-term studies in monkeys butts and slim the region.
Man is informed that Goodall and other scientists from more than 200 scientific study reports, 35 dissertations, 30 books, many films and have produced hundreds of articles (see: p.61) and is about biology and behavior of animals informed, know their tools and read more to family groups, that is, to chimpanzees society.
are very enlightening 'pages 73-74 in the book. has collected Here you can learn concrete facts about chimpanzees that Goodall as part of a 50-year longitudinal study. The DNA of chimpanzees differs from that of man only just over one percent. We read in view of these facts, details on food and the tools of social behavior, communication patterns, the phases of life, society, reproduction and the sense of family.
Male chimpanzees sometimes perform a special show in front of a thunderstorm. Causes of fights are always rank disputes, defense of family members and frustrations that are degraded by the fact that are smaller, weaker conspecifics attacked. It should also lead to struggles for food and for sex partners, (see: p. 76).
We read further that in the woods from Tanzania, Burundi and Uganda, in the dense rain forests of the Congo Basin and West Africa were once up to two million chimpanzees. When the timber companies penetrated into the woods, a restricted habitat of these animals. You can find out more on page 85 Today there are only approximately 300 000 wild chimpanzees. That each year poachers kill thousands of them, is also a fact that comes in the book for discussion.
What can we learn from chimpanzees? Maybe that long mutual grooming the consolidation of friendship and relaxation is used. Perhaps also that some Schimpansinnen have a lot of sex appeal and popular old, experienced Schimpansinnen in men as young, nervous are. (See p. 73). From this perspective, the question many men, "Should I make a monkey?" a whole new dimension. grins
A great book.
Goodall delivered in the course of her life a significant contribution to behavioral research on primates by long-term behavioral studies of wild chimpanzees, particularly in the "Gombe Stream Chimpanzee Reserve in Tanzania ". In 1965 she founded the Gombe Stream Research Center" and in 1976 the Jane Goodall Institute for Wildlife Research, Education in Conservation "by which they presented further research on chimpanzees secure.
After an introduction by Mary Smith and an Introduction by Jane Goodall, one can then in the work of deepening Goodall. The researcher, who came in 1960 in the rain forest of Tanzania to study chimpanzees, has already consulted during her childhood in London with the study of animals. We read how they overcame all the obstacles as a young woman to finally pursue their life task. Based on the extensive photographic material, one may know them as a child and young woman Watch and learn it well in the first Gombe expedition.
This researcher was the world made aware that any chimpanzee is an individual with its own personality, characteristics and quirks (see: p. 37). You can see Goodall on a picture that emerged in the 1960s and finds that, having successfully completed research days in the evening always worked out Your Notes on the behavior of chimpanzees and they can always do with animal observations. The pictures of the chimpanzees I studied with great pleasure.
The research that Dr. Goodall began in 1960, has been continued since then and focus on some 100 chimpanzees, living in Gombe National Park. The current research also includes long-term studies of baboons and short-term studies in monkeys butts and slim the region.
Man is informed that Goodall and other scientists from more than 200 scientific study reports, 35 dissertations, 30 books, many films and have produced hundreds of articles (see: p.61) and is about biology and behavior of animals informed, know their tools and read more to family groups, that is, to chimpanzees society.
are very enlightening 'pages 73-74 in the book. has collected Here you can learn concrete facts about chimpanzees that Goodall as part of a 50-year longitudinal study. The DNA of chimpanzees differs from that of man only just over one percent. We read in view of these facts, details on food and the tools of social behavior, communication patterns, the phases of life, society, reproduction and the sense of family.
Male chimpanzees sometimes perform a special show in front of a thunderstorm. Causes of fights are always rank disputes, defense of family members and frustrations that are degraded by the fact that are smaller, weaker conspecifics attacked. It should also lead to struggles for food and for sex partners, (see: p. 76).
We read further that in the woods from Tanzania, Burundi and Uganda, in the dense rain forests of the Congo Basin and West Africa were once up to two million chimpanzees. When the timber companies penetrated into the woods, a restricted habitat of these animals. You can find out more on page 85 Today there are only approximately 300 000 wild chimpanzees. That each year poachers kill thousands of them, is also a fact that comes in the book for discussion.
What can we learn from chimpanzees? Maybe that long mutual grooming the consolidation of friendship and relaxation is used. Perhaps also that some Schimpansinnen have a lot of sex appeal and popular old, experienced Schimpansinnen in men as young, nervous are. (See p. 73). From this perspective, the question many men, "Should I make a monkey?" a whole new dimension. grins
A great book.
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