first of all, lets establish that the chimps in the region are a bit of a mixed bag...??? is this true? to what extent are the regions chimps 'hybridised'? if anybody knows?
Correct Glyn. There are very few chimps of known wild origins in the pedigrees of the living chimps in the region, and only two of these are alive (1 at Willowbank, and 1 at Auckland).
All of the chimps in the region have been managed at species level for many years, because, as Pat points out, we are breeding chimps in this region purely for display purposes. With the huge proportion of chimps that are not pure subspecies in this region, there is absolutely no point managing them any other way.
We will never phase out these subspecies hybrids in favour of animals of known subspecies, and even if we did, there are so few pure subspecies chimps in captivity available to us, that it would be a pointless excersie - we would never obtain enough unrelated animals to start a decent regional group.
The regiona currently has 48 chimps in 8 institutions, and plans to increase to 60 chimps in 9 institutions within the next 5 years. Breeding recommendations are developed each year by the species coordinator, and agreed upon by all institutions holding chimps. Only specimens listed with breeding recommendations are to breed, and all other breeding must be prevented or a recommendation agreed upon by the species coordinator and institution if breeding to institutional capacity.
DNA testing is being carried out here and in other regions to determine paternity, where unknown, and this will provide data to enable more complete studbooks, hopefully tracing all animals back to wild founders, and therefore a better idea of which animals originated from the different subspecies.