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T-post Tom
03-05-2006, 11:00 PM
'Hippie chimps' fast disappearing as dinner

Sunday, March 5, 2006; Posted: 9:46 p.m. EST (02:46 GMT)


As few as 5,000 bonobos remain in Congo.

What Is This? MBIHE-MOKELE, Congo (AP) -- Scientists are struggling to save the fast-disappearing bonobo, the gentle "hippie chimp" known for resolving squabbles through sex rather than violence.

Unfortunately, bonobos are prized by Congolese for their tasty meat, and many villagers who are illegally hunting the wiry, wizen-faced apes don't realize how close their prey is to extinction.

"Bonobos are an icon for peace and love, the world's 'hippie chimps,"' said Sally Coxe of the Washington-based Bonobo Conservation Initiative. "To let them die off would be a catastrophe."

The animals are known for greeting rival groups with genital handshakes and sensual body rubs. Bonobo spats are swiftly settled -- often with a French kiss and a quick round of sex. (Damn straight there'd be a new CBA if the owners, agents, attorneys and players adopted this custom.)
Despite all the sex, however, female bonobos give birth to a single infant only once every five years, making the species especially vulnerable.

The bonobo, or pan paniscus, is native only to the vast rain forest in this huge central African nation, living high off the ground in treetop nests.

As few as 5,000 may now remain in Congo, down from an estimated 100,000 in 1984, said Ino Guabini, a primatologist with the World Wildlife Fund.

"There is no question that bonobos are seriously threatened," Guabini said, speaking over a shrill forest symphony of birds, animals and insects. "We need urgent measures or there is no way we can protect the species."

But for poor villagers, bonobos can be lucrative business, with much of the meat heading for expensive, clandestine meals at restaurants in the cities.

One bonobo can earn $200 for Richard Ipaka, a 50-year-old part-time poacher who lives in the provincial capital, Mbandaka.

"That's enough money for two months," he said.

Like many Congolese, he said he did not know bonobos are found in the wild only in his country. And like many others, he was skeptical that the ape is endangered.

"Our ancestors have been eating bonobos for centuries. How could they disappear?" Ipaka said.

But the peace-loving bonobos are increasingly difficult to sight, and not just because they're good at hiding, suspended from the high branches of trees or swiftly traversing the lattice of thick, muddy roots strewn over the forest floor.

The best place to glimpse them these days may be the Bonobo Paradise sanctuary in Congo's capital, Kinshasa, which is home to a few dozen rescued from poachers by police.

Poachers have devised an array of methods to bag bonobos.

Hunters in Congo's Equator province say the apes are most easily captured when asleep drunk, so poachers intoxicate them with beer and palm wine. The dazed bonobos are stuffed in bags and carted off to local markets.

Other poachers use guns, and some leave poisoned meat in the forest, silently killing packs of up to 20 bonobos at a time.

Ipaka, who uses a battle-worn Kalashnikov assault rifle to shoot bonobos sleeping in their nests, said he hunts most often with bands of unemployed militiamen left over from a string of rebellions, coups and conflict that ravaged Congo beginning in the mid-1990s.

The bonobo is the subject of age-old songs and legends, and conservationists hope to turn some of those traditions to their advantage.

In the village of Botwalu, for instance, locals believe the bonobo was once a man who lived with their tribe but now hides in the forest because an angry tree stripped him of its clothes.

"The bonobo is a man, only it is ashamed to be naked. It is wrong to hunt or eat bonobos," said Mokelo Moibula, chief of a village committee that works to protect bonobos.

The Bonobo Conservation Initiative has begun working with villages that hold such hunting taboos to create a series of reserves for the graceful animals.

"So far we're working on an area larger than the size of Wales, and it's getting bigger," Coxe said.

That may not be enough. Even provincial police who are supposed to protect the bonobo are mostly ignorant about dangers to its survival, and they are often sympathetic to those who eat it.

Some officers consume bonoobo meat, too, said Clerivent Kanyamba, deputy chief of the Equator province police.

"What can we do if bonobo meat is tasty?" Kanyamba said.

listopencil
03-05-2006, 11:19 PM
The animals are known for greeting rival groups with genital handshakes and sensual body rubs. Bonobo spats are swiftly settled -- often with a French kiss and a quick round of sex.


I am now announcing my decision to abandon the rules of human society and have declared myself an honorary Bonobo. Peace be unto you.

listopencil
03-05-2006, 11:19 PM
BTW, my meat is very tasty.

ZootedGranny
03-05-2006, 11:42 PM
"OOOOOOOOOOH, CHIMPANZEE THAT MONKEY NEWS!"

Simplex3
03-05-2006, 11:44 PM
Would the chimps be going extinct if the zoos hadn't stolen the ones they did? Maybe the few dozen they took out of the wild were the ones that were the most productive and now they're all sad and f**king less. Maybe it isn't some dude with a spear who manages to kill one every couple of months.

Ugly Duck
03-06-2006, 12:02 AM
[b]I am now announcing my decision to abandon the rules of human society and have declared myself an honorary Bonobo. Actually, Bonobos are our closest relatives.... sharing 99% of our DNA:

"Like human females, the genitalia of female bonobos are in the front, for face to face copulation, which makes humans and bonobos unique among the primates.”

http://www.dlynnwaldron.com/Kissingcrop.jpg

http://www.dlynnwaldron.com/Missionarycrop.jpg

listopencil
03-06-2006, 12:11 AM
Actually, Bonobos are our closest relatives.... sharing 99% of our DNA:

"Like human females, the genitalia of female bonobos are in the front, for face to face copulation, which makes humans and bonobos unique among the primates.”






I think at this point The Planet should present me with a female KC fan to french kiss, grope and have face-to-face sex with for the mutual benefit of our rival groups. And no, I don't mean gochiefs.

Phobia
03-06-2006, 12:19 AM
http://www.dlynnwaldron.com/Missionarycrop.jpg

My wife gets that look every once in a while.... will you hurry up and finish? I'm the man.

Fish
03-06-2006, 12:39 AM
Save the bonobos!!!!!

Ugly Duck
03-06-2006, 01:46 AM
I think at this point The Planet should present me with a female KC fan to french kiss, grope and have face-to-face sex with for the mutual benefit of our rival groups. I think some of their cheerleaders are Bonobos.... you have a chance!

mikey23545
03-06-2006, 06:24 AM
Well, it certainly sounds like the bonobos are doing their part to save the species...

Braincase
03-06-2006, 06:41 AM
This thread has spawned a flurry of activity in the offices of former Attorney General John Ashcroft, who is seeking to retrain bonobos and, if possible, convert them to Christianity...

Adept Havelock
03-06-2006, 06:53 AM
This thread has spawned a flurry of activity in the offices of former Attorney General John Ashcroft, who is seeking to retrain bonobos and, if possible, convert them to Christianity...
Or at the very least, insure they only have sex in the approved missionary position, with no enjoyment for the female.

jspchief
03-06-2006, 07:57 AM
The females only give birth once every 5 years?

It would be sad to see any species go extincy, but it sounds an aweful lot like they aren't equipped to survive anyway.

Troy1220
03-06-2006, 08:06 AM
While in Banzanduga, Congo working with a tribe in Lukoukou. I actually partook in the sweet delicacy known as "monkey meat" Mmmmmm...tasted like caca.

Troy

Rausch
03-06-2006, 08:09 AM
The animals are known for greeting rival groups with genital handshakes and sensual body rubs. Bonobo spats are swiftly settled -- often with a French kiss and a quick round of sex.


I am now announcing my decision to abandon the rules of human society and have declared myself an honorary Bonobo. Peace be unto you.

You touch my nads Denber-fan and I'll tie yer Bonobo around yer ****ing neck...

Braincase
03-06-2006, 09:39 AM
While in Banzanduga, Congo working with a tribe in Lukoukou. I actually partook in the sweet delicacy known as "monkey meat" Mmmmmm...tasted like caca.

Troy

I wouldn't know what caca tastes like.

Troy1220
03-06-2006, 10:03 AM
I wouldn't know what caca tastes like.

Like "monkey meat"

Troy