Housing conditions and breeding success of chimpanzees at the primate center TNO
article
Results of rearing and breeding chimpanzees at the Primate Center TNO are presented. The colony was built up from 1964 to 1971 by the acquisition of mostly young chimpanzees; thereafter, it was increased by local breeding. The ages at which the animals became reproductive were between 6 and 11 years for the males and between 7 and 15 years for the females. Seventy-six percent of the pregnancies (N = 132) were carried to full term and 87% of these were live births. Fifty-five percent of the babies were nursed by their mothers for 2–10 months. The next pregnancy after an abortion occurred on the average after 7 months; after a carriage to term, this occurred after 11.9 months. The difference was not influenced by the duration of the weaning period. Animals of 2 years or more that had been weaned within a month were more likely to show body rocking than animals weaned later. Cases of disturbed social or reproductive behavior were rare; the first locally bred animals have become reproductively active. Copyright © 1983 Wiley-Liss, Inc., A Wiley Company
TNO Identifier
572640
ISSN
0733-3188
Source
Zoo Biology, 2(4), pp. 295-302.
Pages
295-302
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