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Meanings of captive chimpanzees in anglès
We have no meanings for "captive chimpanzees" in our records yet.
Usage of captive chimpanzees in anglès
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Some studies, including research on captivechimpanzees, have linked heredity to the survival rates of young animals.
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The National Institutes of Health today announced that 310 captivechimpanzees will be retired from medical research.
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This study examined eye preference in 45 captivechimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) in response to various stimuli.
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Amory, of course, knew nothing about what captivechimpanzees required or how to interpret their behavior toward each other.
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Animals: 290 wild-born captivechimpanzees.
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To test this hypothesis, data were collected from 101 captivechimpanzees living in mixed-sex social groupings of seven to twelve individuals.
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Unlike other endangered animals, which are considered endangered regardless of where they are, the U.S. government makes an exception for captivechimpanzees.
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Fish and Wildlife Service that would categorize captivechimpanzees as endangered, which would keep them from being used in invasive experiments altogether.
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An international team of experts including psychologists, primatologists and economists, studied more than 500 captivechimpanzees and orangutans from around the world.
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Though a few anecdotal reports exist of captivechimpanzees treating sticks like dolls, the behavior has never before been reported in the wild.
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The current study examined associations between chimpanzee personality traits and the grey matter volume and asymmetry of various frontal cortex regions in 107 captivechimpanzees.
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Our findings bear influence on contemporary discussions of interspecies social relationships, captive welfare, health, translocation, and husbandry protocols for captivechimpanzees and other nonhuman primates.
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In this study, captivechimpanzees were found to gesture, vocalize, and display more often when the experimenter had a tool than when she did not.
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Objective: To comprehensively characterize cardiac structure and function, from infancy to adulthood, in male and female wild-born captivechimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) living in sanctuaries.
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These results support the notion that caregivers offer additional opportunities (i.e., beyond those with conspecifics) for captivechimpanzees to construct and maintain meaningful social relationships.