Date: March 7, 2019
Source: Purdue University
The West
African chimpanzee population has declined by nearly 80 percent in recent
decades. Habitat loss is threatening their livelihoods across the continent,
and especially in Senegal, where corporate mining has started eating up land in
recent years.
The
geographical distribution of West African chimps overlaps almost perfectly with
gold and iron ore deposits, and unfortunately for the chimps, mining is a key
piece of the country's development strategy, said Stacy Lindshield, a
biological anthropologist at Purdue University.
Extractive
industries are already improving people's livelihoods and promoting investment
and infrastructure development, and researchers are trying to find a way to
protect Senegal's chimps without surrendering these benefits. Many of Earth's
animal species are now dying off at accelerated rates, but as human's closest
living relatives, they tend to tug at our heart strings. Chimps are
scientifically important, too -- because they participate in collective
activities such as hunting and food-sharing, they're often studied by social
science researchers.
A new
study of animal populations inside and outside a protected area in Senegal,
Niokolo-Koba National Park, shows that protecting such an area from human
interaction and development preserves not only chimps but many other mammal
species. The findings were published in the journal Folia Primatologica.
"We
saw the same number of chimpanzee species inside and outside the park, but more
species of carnivores and ungulates in the protected area," Lindshield
said.
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