Rehabilitating Chimpanzees - A Labour Of Love

SOMORIA, GUINEA - DECEMBER 02: Volunteer Justine Le Hingrat, 22 from Brittany in France gets some attention from one of the nursery group after a bushwalk at the Chimpanzee Conservation Centre (CCC) on December 02, 2015 in Somoria, Guinea. The CCC is a sanctuary and a rehabilitation centre for orphaned chimpanzees and is supported in part by Project Primate, Inc., a US NGO. The centre is located on the Banks of the River Niger in the Haut Niger National Park in Guinea, West Africa and consists of around 6000 square km of Savannah and tropical dry forests. The CCC currently looks after 50 Western Chimpanzees, one of the most endangered sub species of chimpanzee. Most of the animals were orphaned and subsequently rescued after being taken as babies in the wild from their family groups. According to the Great Apes Survival Partnership, (GRASP), for every young Chimpanzee rescued, around 10 of its family members will have likely been killed in the process. The centre rehabilitates and cares for the animals, and ultimately aims to release them back into the wild, a process that take over 10 years. The animals often suffer from physical and psychological damage, but with care, attention and compassion from the keepers and volunteers, the animals begin the long process of gaining independence and learning how to survive in the wild. As they develop they are slowly integrated back into larger family groups until they are ready for their eventual release when possible. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)
SOMORIA, GUINEA - DECEMBER 02: Volunteer Justine Le Hingrat, 22 from Brittany in France gets some attention from one of the nursery group after a bushwalk at the Chimpanzee Conservation Centre (CCC) on December 02, 2015 in Somoria, Guinea. The CCC is a sanctuary and a rehabilitation centre for orphaned chimpanzees and is supported in part by Project Primate, Inc., a US NGO. The centre is located on the Banks of the River Niger in the Haut Niger National Park in Guinea, West Africa and consists of around 6000 square km of Savannah and tropical dry forests. The CCC currently looks after 50 Western Chimpanzees, one of the most endangered sub species of chimpanzee. Most of the animals were orphaned and subsequently rescued after being taken as babies in the wild from their family groups. According to the Great Apes Survival Partnership, (GRASP), for every young Chimpanzee rescued, around 10 of its family members will have likely been killed in the process. The centre rehabilitates and cares for the animals, and ultimately aims to release them back into the wild, a process that take over 10 years. The animals often suffer from physical and psychological damage, but with care, attention and compassion from the keepers and volunteers, the animals begin the long process of gaining independence and learning how to survive in the wild. As they develop they are slowly integrated back into larger family groups until they are ready for their eventual release when possible. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)
Rehabilitating Chimpanzees - A Labour Of Love
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Credit:
Dan Kitwood / Staff
Editorial #:
618286990
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Getty Images News
Date created:
02 December, 2015
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