I cannot see how a few baby chimps born at Monkey World can possibly be a bad thing, the fact that these animals were originally rescued does not necessarily mean that they should be denied the right to reproduce as they would in the wild, in fact is it not a good thing considering how bad a lifemost of these chimps had before they came to Monkey World that they are now living the lives of normal chimps and having babies, which I am sure will be advantageous to the chimp group .I am sure the experienced Dr. Allison Cronin does not need to consult a fan of Edinburgh Zoo on how to manage any of her primates, a zoo which does not appear to be having much luck in breeding its chimps despite whatever contraception or not they have placed their animals on, a zoo incidentylwhich practiced a policy of breed and cull until they were caught with their pants down well and truly regarding another species.[/QUOT
Slightly hard on Edinburgh, but let that pass. There's a simpler point, though: Monkey World want to have space for rescue animals, which is a fine and good thing in itself. Given the average lifespan of Chimpanzees, the high cost of keeping them in acceptable conditions, and the large number of non-pedigree animals already within the EEP, I would respectfully suggest that Monkey World's aim to avoid breeding their Chimpanzees is based on well-founded logic.