What is actually the plan with the chimp troupe in Edinburgh Zoo?Has the new male chimp been introduced yet? He’s been by himself for a few months now.
I believe all the hybrids have long been vasectomised/contracepted so would presume the focus remains breeding from the West African individuals, which have been there for some years now, though only two(?) young have so far been born.What is actually the plan with the chimp troupe in Edinburgh Zoo?
(It is very large and contains both pure West African and mixed hybrid chimps (probably all neutered / vasectomised)
That is to be precise the background to my question: For all the years of holding a colony of chimps a meagre output! What is holding them down? They held 3-5 West African males don't they already apart from the new immigrant, right (I think 2 had been neutered, but not King Louis, Rene and Velu)?I believe all the hybrids have long been vasectomised/contracepted so would presume the focus remains breeding from the West African individuals, which have been there for some years now, though only two(?) young have so far been born.
The daily 'Tropicaria Zoo blog' mentions Edinburgh as saying they may have to reduce the bird and primate collections further to save more cost. Wonder what species might be involved? Do they still have the group of Guinea baboons? Perhaps they might be one candidate?
What is actually the plan with the chimp troupe in Edinburgh Zoo?
(It is very large and contains both pure West African and mixed hybrid chimps (probably all neutered / vasectomised)
M King Louis (wb S.Leone 1976, your male in his forties, I guess),
To make it a little easier, I list the individuals (as per the 2014 studbook):
P.t. verus (5.4): F Pearl (b. S.Leone 1969), M King Louis (wb S.Leone 1976, your male in his forties, I guess), F Sophie (TNO b. 1981), F Lianne (TNO, b. 1989) and F Heleen (TNO, b. 1991), M Rene (TNO, b. 1993), M Paul (TNO, b. 1993, neutered), M Freek (TNO, b. 1993, neutered), M Velu (b. 2014 Edinburgh MULTIxHeleen).
P.t. troglodytes (1.2): F Cindy (b. W.Africa 1964, contracepted), F Emma (b. Whipsnade 1981, contracepted), M Qafzeh (b. Edinburgh 1992 MULTIxEmma).
Hybrids (3.4): M David (neutered), F Lucy (contracepted), F Eva (contracepted), F Kilimi (b. 1992 Edinburgh, contracepted), F Edith (contracepted), M Kindia (neutered) and M Liberius (neutered).
Source: https://www.zoo.dk/files/stambog_chimpanser_zoo_2014.pdf
I gather from your transcript:
A) all verus mentioned above should still be alive today and now includes 2 infants by XY (mother Heleen?)?
B) both troglodytes females have been transferred or have passed away in the meantime?
C) one hybrid has been transferred or more likely has passed away in the meantime?
@ShonenJake13, thanks for your comments.
I am inclined to think the current constellation of the group might in some way prevent any breeding in the group from really taking off. The big part of the founder verus group originated from TNO and probably was together there before transferring to Edinburgh Zoo. On another level, the strong man / social structure already in place at Edinburgh Zoo makes it challenging to introduce other immigrant chimps into the community. The new Kobenhavn male at 10+ is yet not a mature male able to take over a group, is it not (males usually tend to be between 20-25 when leading a group)?
I do believe that in chimp social structures males born into a natal group will remain within their community whereas most young adolescent females will join other groups when maturing.
Link: Female chimps with a powerful mother are more likely to stay at home - WSTale.com
Male Qafzeh is a P.t. troglodytes, so if he is the leader ..., is that not preventing a good P.t. verus line from developing. Would it not be advisable to then remove him from the equation rather than waiting for any of the 2 other males to vie for leadership (which currently they seem unable to do)?
Do you know who has been confirmed as the sire of F Heleen's offspring?
The daily 'Tropicaria Zoo blog' mentions Edinburgh as saying they may have to reduce the bird and primate collections further to save more cost.
Wonder what species might be involved? Do they still have the group of Guinea baboons? Perhaps they might be one candidate?