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Mom feeds her baby #Babymonkeys #Monkeys #Animals #Wildlife #Funny

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#monkey #baby #feed #feeding #milk #love #motherlove #motherhood #hungry #care #caring #mom #momlife #nature #animals #ticktock #tiktok

630 Likes, 33 Comments. TikTok video from Laughingpretty (@sn78751): "#monkey #baby #feed #feeding #milk #love #motherlove #motherhood #hungry #care #caring #mom #momlife #nature #animals #ticktock #tiktok". Bare Necessities (Instrumental Version).

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Mother breastfeeding baby monkey,So cute animals #animals #animal #pet #pets #monkey #monkeys

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Mother monkey is feeding her baby monkey #monkey #monther

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Andy

The mother monkey feeds the baby monkey.#animals #monkey #fyp #foryou #happy

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99zzmi

Mother monkey feeds her baby? This is a good mother!#monkey #cute #pet #animal #fyp

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Lovely Animals

Mom feeds baby #Monkeys #Babymonkeys #Animals #Funny

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Rain Rose

Mommy Monkey feeding baby monkey #fyp #adventure #explore #travel #tiktok #animals #zoo #monkey #enjoylife

TikTok video from Rain Rose (@rainrose50): "Mommy Monkey feeding baby monkey #fyp #adventure #explore #travel #tiktok #animals #zoo #monkey #enjoylife". Monkey's family. Mommy monkey is feeding baby monkey. . Fun Fun Fun Fun Fun Fun.

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Zeke & Zela

Feeding Baby Zela🐒❤️ #foryou #babymonkey #bottle #fypシ゚ #monkeymom #hungrymonkey #vibes #monkeylove #monkeysoftiktok

16. 5K Likes, 276 Comments. TikTok video from Zeke & Zela (@mamag_monkeyz): "Feeding Baby Zela🐒❤️ #foryou #babymonkey #bottle #fypシ゚ #monkeymom #hungrymonkey #vibes #monkeylove #monkeysoftiktok". original sound.

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Mother monkey feeds her baby? This is a good mother!#monkey #cute #pet #animal #fyp

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#monkey #baby #feed #feeding #milk #love #motherlove #motherhood #hungry #care #caring #mom #momlife #nature #animals #ticktock #tiktok

630 Likes, 33 Comments. TikTok video from Laughingpretty (@sn78751): "#monkey #baby #feed #feeding #milk #love #motherlove #motherhood #hungry #care #caring #mom #momlife #nature #animals #ticktock #tiktok". Bare Necessities (Instrumental Version).

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Bare Necessities (Instrumental Version) - Baby Lullaby & Bedtime Lullabies

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Mother monkey is feeding her baby monkey #monkey #monther

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FEEDING ANIMAL

mom monkey sharing food with her baby #feedinganimal @feeding_animal

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Cute Animals

Mother breastfeeding baby monkey,So cute animals #animals #animal #pet #pets #monkey #monkeys

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Newborn baby drinking milk❤❤❤ #monkey #maternallove #breastfeeding #cute #animallove

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Monkey Camp

Feed poor baby monkey in hot season, all monkey very thirsty, Fresh Newborn Monkey 778#monkeycamp #monkey #monkeyangkor

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Rain Rose

Mommy Monkey feeding baby monkey #fyp #adventure #explore #travel #tiktok #animals #zoo #monkey #enjoylife

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How a female chimpanzee cared for her sick baby

  • Melissa Hogenboom
  • BBC Earth

Image copyright, Getty

Photo caption,

Chimpanzees are usually very protective of their young

For the first time in history, scientists have seen a female chimpanzee caring for a baby with developmental problems. Unfortunately, the touching care of the mother did not save the baby, although it extended her life, the correspondent writes BBC Earth.

So far, this case is considered the only one of its kind.

Scientists were able to observe how a female chimpanzee takes care of her cub in the wild, struck by extremely serious illnesses.

A juvenile chimpanzee was discovered in the Mahali Mountains National Park in western Tanzania*, home to the largest population of these primates in the country.

The monkey, designated by scientists as XT11, lived for 23 months. She was the sixth child of her 36-year-old mother, Christina.

In terms of her physical condition, XT11 was similar to a captive chimpanzee with Down syndrome-like symptoms.

Short life

It seems that XT11 was able to live as long as she lived thanks to the care of her mother, without which she would have been doomed to a quick death.

Image copyright Michio Nakamura

Image caption

Sick XT11 calf (left) and calf of the same age (right)

abnormal behavior, disabilities and [specific] needs of XT11."

According to their observations, the young monkey did not eat plant foods and remained completely dependent on mother's milk for much longer than the period when chimpanzees usually wean from the breast.

"We hypothesize that her limited diet was due to her lack of motor ability and that she was malnourished due to her milk diet, at least in later life," the authors of the article noted.

In addition to limited physical abilities, XT11 had an abdominal hernia, a damaged spine, and an extra inactive finger on his left hand.

Her eyes were empty, her mouth often remained half open, she could not sit without support.

Image copyright Michio Nakamura

Photo caption

Baby had a growth on her belly

She could hold on to her mother's fur, but her hind limbs weren't strong enough to grab onto her mother, so she hung almost all the time.

Caring for a disabled cub forced Christina to change her habits.

She stopped catching ants in the trees because she always carried baby XT11 in her arms.

"The mother of the crippled calf was probably more stressed than other mothers because she had to provide intensive care for her calf for longer," write the authors.

The evolution of instinct

From time to time, 11-year-old sister XT11 helped her mother to take care of the patient: she played with the baby and carried her in her arms.

"Sometimes it has happened that a mother would suddenly hand over a baby to her eldest daughter. This is quite unusual behavior for a mother," says Michio Nakamura, co-author of the report prepared by experts at the University of Kyoto, Japan.

Image copyright, Michio Nakamura

Image caption,

The older sister also often took care of the sick

"While the crippled cub was in the care of the older sister, the mother could climb a tree and eat fruit," Nakamura told BBC Earth .

But when the elder sister had children of her own, this extra help stopped.

Other relatives of XT11 were not allowed to care for her or wear her, which is also quite unusual.

Apparently, the mother understood that if the sick baby was in their hands, it might not be safe for her, because they might not understand her needs.

The cause of XT11's death remains unclear, possibly due to her limited diet.

While it is not uncommon for primates to be born with physical disabilities, there have only been two cases in the past where disabled cubs have been observed.

Image copyright Takuya Matsumoto

Image caption

The sick baby's eyes were often blank and the mouth half open.

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And both times it happened in captivity. Mothers either neglected them or abandoned such cubs, and people came to the aid of such babies.

One of the invalids died at the age of 17 months, the other survived to two years, but only thanks to repeated blood transfusions.

The fact that such care among our closest relatives has been observed in the wild points to a long evolutionary history of such animal behavior.

Perhaps our ancestors, common to humans and chimpanzees, were able to demonstrate the same level of concern for problematic offspring.

"Our observations of how an older sister cared for a disabled cub shed light on the evolution of non-maternal care for crippled individuals," says Michio Nakamura.

Translator's note

*Chimpanzees in the Mahali Mountains National Park are being studied by primatologists from the University of Kyoto, Japan. The project was started in 1961. In 1965, Japanese specialists founded the first scientific camp for observing chimpanzees in their natural habitat.

Read the original of this article in English is available on the website BBC Earth.

The monkey carried the corpse of a cub for two weeks, and then ate

A female Tonk macaque carried the mummified corpse of her calf with her for two weeks and then ate it. This is the first case of cannibalism observed by researchers in this species. This behavior can be seen as a normal, albeit rare, behavior of macaques, primatologists say.

The researchers described the unusual behavior of the monkey in the journal Primates . It is known that female primates sometimes carry dead cubs with them for some time. The reason for this is unknown - perhaps they are unable to part with the baby, or maybe they simply do not understand that he is dead.

However, this is the first time that a female Tonk macaque eats her mummified baby.

Monkey Evalin gave birth to a cub in the Abatino nature reserve in Italy. When the baby was only four days old, he died. For the next two days, the female seemed inconsolable, she kept looking at her reflection in the plastic door of the fence and screaming at him.

She then turned her attention to the carcass of the cub. Evalyn carried it with her and looked after him, paying special attention to the head and muzzle.

“After gradually drying up over the first week, the corpse was completely mummified on the eighth day,” the researchers wrote. “During the second week, Evalyn continued to carry the corpse with her and care for it, although by that time the skin and flesh had peeled off the skull. She carried the corpse in one hand or in her mouth and hurried to pick it up if it fell.

Other macaques did not pay much attention to Evalyn and did not try to do anything with the corpse.

On the 19th day, the researchers first saw how she eats small pieces of the corpse.

On the 22nd day, the remains of the cub fell apart, but Evalyn always carried a part of the corpse with her in her mouth or hand. By the 25th day, she had gnawed him to the bone.

Previously, scientists have observed how baboons, orangutans, bonobos, Japanese macaques and rhesus macaques eat their dead cubs. For the Tonca macaques, this behavior was seen for the first time.

“There is no reason to believe that cannibalism in the female Tonca macaque was due to nutritional deficiencies or social factors. This behavior can be seen as a normal, albeit rare, behavioral feature of macaques, the researchers say. “Perhaps by the time the female began to eat the corpse, she did not realize that these were the mummified remains of her cub.”

Earlier this year, scientists observed another unusual primate scene .

In a Zambian chimpanzee reserve, a female brushes her stepson's teeth.

A nine-year-old male died of a bacterial lung infection. The female who adopted him four years ago after the death of his mother, settled down at the head of a dead chimpanzee, unclenched his teeth, felt them and began to clean with a hard blade of grass, periodically licking it. Her own teenage daughter was watching what was happening.

Studying this behavior may reveal something about our own post-mortem rituals, researchers say. However, it is not possible to draw conclusions about the thought processes underlying such behavior. It is not known whether chimpanzees understand what death is.


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