Home Actor Ronan Donovan HD Instagram Photos and Wallpapers August 2020 Ronan Donovan Instagram - Another quiet moment between Mususu and her son, Moon. At the time I took this photo, Mususu would have been ~40 years old and Moon was her 4th baby. Mususu was a northern female and I didn’t see her very much. She was shy. Within this wild chimpanzee community that I followed as a researcher in 2011, there were specific sub-groups of females that preferred to keep to a region within community’s territory. Some to the north or to the south and some kept to the center of the territory.     While the total number of chimpanzees in this community was 58 at the time, never in the history of the 40 year study did this group have all 58 members been the same place. Like humans, elephants, bats, and some whale species (to name a few), chimps are a fission-fusion society. Essentially this means that the social structure of chimps is dynamic. A large group of 30 comes together to feed on ripe figs, lets say, while other smaller groups of 4-8 chimps are a few miles away feeding on something else.⁣⁣ It makes for very interesting days following chimps through their equatorial forest, you never know who will show up.  Learn more about chimps in the current issue of @natgeo magazine, through my posts here and by following the conservation NGO @bulindichimps  .⁣⁣  .⁣⁣  .⁣⁣  .⁣⁣  #chimpanzee #chimp #chimpanzees #chimps #ape #wildlife #conservation #animals #africa #uganda #bulindi #bulindichimps #wildlifephotography #nature #natgeo⁣⁣ Uganda

Ronan Donovan Instagram – Another quiet moment between Mususu and her son, Moon. At the time I took this photo, Mususu would have been ~40 years old and Moon was her 4th baby. Mususu was a northern female and I didn’t see her very much. She was shy. Within this wild chimpanzee community that I followed as a researcher in 2011, there were specific sub-groups of females that preferred to keep to a region within community’s territory. Some to the north or to the south and some kept to the center of the territory.     While the total number of chimpanzees in this community was 58 at the time, never in the history of the 40 year study did this group have all 58 members been the same place. Like humans, elephants, bats, and some whale species (to name a few), chimps are a fission-fusion society. Essentially this means that the social structure of chimps is dynamic. A large group of 30 comes together to feed on ripe figs, lets say, while other smaller groups of 4-8 chimps are a few miles away feeding on something else.⁣⁣ It makes for very interesting days following chimps through their equatorial forest, you never know who will show up.  Learn more about chimps in the current issue of @natgeo magazine, through my posts here and by following the conservation NGO @bulindichimps  .⁣⁣  .⁣⁣  .⁣⁣  .⁣⁣  #chimpanzee #chimp #chimpanzees #chimps #ape #wildlife #conservation #animals #africa #uganda #bulindi #bulindichimps #wildlifephotography #nature #natgeo⁣⁣ Uganda

Ronan Donovan Instagram - Another quiet moment between Mususu and her son, Moon. At the time I took this photo, Mususu would have been ~40 years old and Moon was her 4th baby. Mususu was a northern female and I didn’t see her very much. She was shy. Within this wild chimpanzee community that I followed as a researcher in 2011, there were specific sub-groups of females that preferred to keep to a region within community’s territory. Some to the north or to the south and some kept to the center of the territory.     While the total number of chimpanzees in this community was 58 at the time, never in the history of the 40 year study did this group have all 58 members been the same place. Like humans, elephants, bats, and some whale species (to name a few), chimps are a fission-fusion society. Essentially this means that the social structure of chimps is dynamic. A large group of 30 comes together to feed on ripe figs, lets say, while other smaller groups of 4-8 chimps are a few miles away feeding on something else.⁣⁣ It makes for very interesting days following chimps through their equatorial forest, you never know who will show up.  Learn more about chimps in the current issue of @natgeo magazine, through my posts here and by following the conservation NGO @bulindichimps  .⁣⁣  .⁣⁣  .⁣⁣  .⁣⁣  #chimpanzee #chimp #chimpanzees #chimps #ape #wildlife #conservation #animals #africa #uganda #bulindi #bulindichimps #wildlifephotography #nature #natgeo⁣⁣ Uganda

Ronan Donovan Instagram – Another quiet moment between Mususu and her son, Moon. At the time I took this photo, Mususu would have been ~40 years old and Moon was her 4th baby. Mususu was a northern female and I didn’t see her very much. She was shy. Within this wild chimpanzee community that I followed as a researcher in 2011, there were specific sub-groups of females that preferred to keep to a region within community’s territory. Some to the north or to the south and some kept to the center of the territory.  

While the total number of chimpanzees in this community was 58 at the time, never in the history of the 40 year study did this group have all 58 members been the same place. Like humans, elephants, bats, and some whale species (to name a few), chimps are a fission-fusion society. Essentially this means that the social structure of chimps is dynamic. A large group of 30 comes together to feed on ripe figs, lets say, while other smaller groups of 4-8 chimps are a few miles away feeding on something else.⁣⁣ It makes for very interesting days following chimps through their equatorial forest, you never know who will show up. 
Learn more about chimps in the current issue of @natgeo magazine, through my posts here and by following the conservation NGO @bulindichimps 
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#chimpanzee #chimp #chimpanzees #chimps #ape #wildlife #conservation #animals #africa #uganda #bulindi #bulindichimps #wildlifephotography #nature #natgeo⁣⁣ Uganda | Posted on 21/Aug/2020 23:36:59

Ronan Donovan Instagram – Reposting another of @michaelnicknichols emotional images related to his powerful body of work related to apes and humans. This is among Nichols’s most iconic images depicting a beautiful moment between @janegoodallinst and a captive chimpanzee. ⁣
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@michaelnicknichols Jane first went to the Brazzville Zoo to see Gregoire in 1990, to check on the old hairless half blind chimp who had been caged since 1945. She encountered the much younger Jou Jou angry and throwing his own feces at visitors.⁣
We would go back in 1994 to essentially rescue Gregoire, going into his cage after the door which had rusted shut was pried open. We went inside and the old man started “clicking” his lips with excitement. It may have been his first physical contact. Jane wore two shirts so he could un-button the first.⁣
Gregoire would live out his live in a sanctuary with the company of young chimpanzees ⁣
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Photo: 1⁣
Jane with Jou Jou⁣
Brazzaville , Congo, 1990⁣
Transparency film⁣
Apes and Humans, National Geographic⁣
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Photo: 2⁣
Gregoire with Jane⁣
Brazzaville, Congo 1994⁣
Transparency film⁣
Jane Goodall , National Geographic Congo-Brazzaville
Ronan Donovan Instagram – In response to the overwhelmingly heartfelt comments in regards to yesterday’s somber repost from @michaelnicknichols 1989 photo of the captive chimp, Jo Jo – I decided to provide some current information in regards to lab tests on chimpanzees in the US today. I will also add some more information in my IG story with links to recent articles. ⁣
Overall, the status of laboratory testing in the US is positive in terms of an ethical and human standpoint. From the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service website:⁣
In 2015, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe today announced a final rule to classify all chimpanzees, both wild and captive, as endangered under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). The rule uplists captive chimpanzees from threatened status to match that of wild chimpanzees and removes them from a special rule for primates that allowed some activities otherwise prohibited under the ESA.⁣
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“Extending captive chimpanzees the protections afforded their endangered cousins in the wild will ensure humane treatment and restrict commercial activities under the Endangered Species Act,” Ashe said. “The decision responds to growing threats to the species and aligns the chimpanzee’s status with existing legal requirements. Meanwhile, we will continue to work with range states to ensure the continued survival and recovery of chimpanzees in the wild.”⁣
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Learn more through my IG story and further at @nonhuman.rights.project feed Planet Earth

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