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chimpanzeeBritannica Student Article

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African great ape. The best studied of the great apes, the chimpanzee is considered by most authorities to be the closest living relative to humans. Although the degree of the relationships between humans and each of the great ape genera has long been debated, molecular analysis has verified that humans and chimpanzees share more than 98 percent of their genes. From a phylogenetic standpoint, this means that chimpanzees and humans shared a common ancestor before humans branched off into their own evolutionary line. (See also Human Origins.)

Within the order Primates, chimpanzees are classified with the other great apes in the family Pongidae, which is grouped with humans and the lesser apes in the superfamily Hominoidea. The scientific name of the chimpanzee is Pan troglodytes; the other species in the genus Pan is P. paniscus, the bonobo. Many authorities further subdivide the chimpanzee species into three subspecies: P. t. troglodytes, which is found mainly in the Central African nations of Gabon, Cameroon, and Congo; P. t. schweinfurthii, which inhabits East Africa in parts of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Tanzania, Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, and Sudan; and P. t. verus, which occupies West Africa from Nigeria to Senegal. Chimpanzees occupy tropical rain forests primarily, but their habitat extends into drier savannah woodlands as well.

Chimpanzees exhibit limited sexual dimorphism, or differences between the sexes, in size. The average head and body length of an adult chimpanzee is 25 to 37 inches (64 to 94 centimeters), and the height when standing erect is approximately 39 to 67 inches (99 to 170 centimeters). In the wild, males weigh between 75 and 154 pounds (34 and 70 kilograms) and females weigh between 57 and 110 pounds (26 and 50 kilograms); in captivity, their respective weights may increase by as many as 22 to 40 pounds (10 to 18 kilograms). The arms are longer than the legs, reaching just below the knees when the animal stands. The hands and feet are long and thin. The thumb is short but, as in all the apes, opposable; the toe is opposable as well.

The coat, or pelage, of the chimpanzee is usually black but ranges from black to light brown. The face, ears, hands, and feet are naked; their skin color is generally black, though it may be pink or brown in younger animals. The hair covering the head is sparse, and both males and females have a tendency toward baldness in maturity. The top of the head is rounded. The ears are prominent and the lips protrude. The jaw is somewhat prognathic, meaning that it projects beyond the upper part of the face, but not to the extent seen in the gorilla.

Chimpanzees are both terrestrial and arboreal. They mainly travel on the ground with a quadrupedal knuckle walk, leaning forward and supporting some of their weight on the front limbs as they move. In the trees, chimpanzees sometimes brachiate, or swing by their arms from branch to branch. Movement through the trees is limited, however, because chimpanzees are not nearly as acrobatic as the lesser apes, or gibbons.

Although sometimes active at night, chimpanzees are primarily diurnal. They spend much of the day foraging for food, usually individually or in small family groups. The diet consists of approximately 60 percent fruits, 30 percent other vegetation, and 10 percent animal matter, which includes insects and occasionally mammals such as monkeys, pigs, and antelope. Although chimpanzees hunt some small prey individually, groups sometimes cooperate to hunt larger, more difficult prey, such as baboons or bush pigs. After a kill is made, individuals compete for the meat, which is shared in response to begging.

No animal other than humans uses tools as effectively as the chimpanzee. Highly intelligent and resourceful, they use sticks to extract termites from the termites' nest and to pull down branches that are beyond their reach. They use leaves to clean their bodies and as sponges to pick up drinking water from holes in tree trunks. In addition, they often modify objects to suit their purpose—for example, stripping a twig of its leaves before plunging it into an anthill. Studies suggest that the use of tools is not instinctive but rather is learned by juveniles through observation and imitation of adults.

The social structure of chimpanzees is complex. It has been described as a fusion-fission society, meaning that members are free to come and go as they wish. A community, which consists of about 15 to 120 individuals, has a dominant male leader, but both males and females form coalitions within the community. Chimpanzees move about in temporary subgroups that continually form, change in composition, and dissolve. Relationships between these groups are generally friendly, as evidenced by the greeting behavior, such as hugging and mutual grooming, that takes place when two subgroups meet. Chimpanzees communicate with other members of their community through vocalizations and gestures that resemble those of humans, such as kissing, stroking, and holding hands. Disputes between community members, which arise over such issues as social position or the defense of family members, may suddenly turn violent, but they rarely last longer than a minute. Because chimpanzees are territorial, however, relationships between communities are often contentious and sometimes deadly. Groups of males patrol the borders of their range, attacking and sometimes killing outsiders. Occasionally, one community gradually takes over the range of a weaker neighboring community by systematically killing or driving away its members.

Although chimpanzees are largely promiscuous—mating freely without forming bonds—adult pairs also form exclusive mating consortships. Reproduction is nonseasonal. After a gestation period of approximately 230 days, a female usually gives birth to a single young; twins occur rarely. Because a mother produces more young only when her older child begins to care for itself, interbirth intervals are generally three to six years. Females and males reach puberty at about age 7, but females generally do not give birth until they are 13 or 14, and males are not integrated into the social hierarchy as adults until they are 15 or 16. Females are capable of reproduction until they are approximately 40 years old. Life span in the wild for both males and females may reach 60 years.

All three subspecies of chimpanzee are listed as endangered. A serious threat to chimpanzee populations is habitat loss through deforestation, which humans perpetrate for living space, agriculture, and logging. Hunting is also a significant danger, as chimpanzees, along with other African wildlife, are prized for their meat. In addition, some mothers are shot and their infants captured and smuggled out of the country for the pet trade and the entertainment industry. Disease has contributed to declining populations as well. Epidemics of poliomyelitis and influenza have swept through chimpanzee communities. Another threat is the Ebola virus, which experts believe is carried and transmitted by chimpanzees.