Rare TV Footage Shows How Chimpanzees Cope With Death

Stirling, Scotland: Researchers in Scotland say a rare video of a chimpanzee dying has offered a unique glimpse into how one of man’s closest relatives deals with death and grieving.

The pictures show the final hours and moment of death of an older female chimpanzee living in a small group at a British safari park.

“Many people thought that death awareness is uniquely human, so our observations are causing us to question whether the distinction in terms of death awareness between humans and non-humans is as great as people thought,” said Jim Anderson, a senior lecturer at Stirling University’s psychology department.

Anderson said they have observed distinctly novel behaviour because traumatic deaths have been seen before, “but never a peaceful death like this”.

In contrast to the kind of commotion that follows a sudden death, the chimpanzees at Blair Drummond Safari Park, near Stirling, were mostly calm.

The footage shows group members grooming and caressing the sick female and apparently testing her for signs of life as she died. They left her soon after her death, but her adult daughter returned and remained by her mother all night.

When keepers removed the mother’s corpse the next day, the chimpanzees remained calm and subdued. For several days they avoided sleeping on the platform where the female had died, though it was normally a favoured sleeping spot. They remained subdued for some time after the death.

“I was surprised that they did all gather round at the moment of death and the subsequent, you know, manipulating the body, shaking her shoulders, shaking her head as if they were trying to rouse her,” said PhD student Louise Lock, who initially placed the cameras in the enclosure to study nocturnal behaviour.

The cameras were turned on by safari park staff when they realised the female chimpanzee’s condition was deteriorating.

Alasdair Gillies, head keeper at Blair Drummond, said normal practice for treating animals in captivity nearing the end of their lives could now be reviewed.

“These guys have been together all of their lives,” Gillies said. “I thought it is completely the wrong thing to do for these guys to be separate. So, the decision was to just let them through, all be together.”

Chimpanzees are considered an endangered species with only 150,000 thought to be still living in the wild.

The researchers said watching the footage was extremely moving and may change our understanding of how our closest evolutionary relatives deal with death.

“I think what we know now,” said Jim Anderson, “is that chimpanzees probably have a greater awareness of death than many people thought.” By Stuart McDill, DNA India

Mayweather Pounds Mosley To Stay Unbeaten

Floyd Mayweather remained unbeaten on Saturday, defeating “Sugar” Shane Mosley by unanimous decision in a showdown of veteran US welterweight boxers.

Mayweather improved to 41-0, winning on judges’ scores of 119-109, 119-109 and 118-110, while Mosley fell to 46-6.

Mosley, a Maori tribal tatoo adorning his left shoulder, landed a hard right cross early in the second round that staggered Mayweather and followed with several more punches that threatened to end the fight early.

But Mayweather weathered the storm and slowly began to use his speed and skill to seize command. By the sixth round, he was landing hard rights and getting inside to work on 38-year-old Mosley time after time.

Mayweather, 33, connected on more power shots late in the seventh round and started verbal taunts as well as hard punches in the eighth and kept dominating all the way to the final bell in the 12th round.

Mayweather had been looking to fight unbeaten Filipino superstar Manny Pacquiao but talks unravelled and Pacquiao instead fought Ghana’s Joshua Clottey on March 13, beating him by unanimous decision in Dallas.

Mosley had not fought since a ninth-round stoppage of Antonio Margarito in January of last year.

Mayweather declined to fight for Mosley’s World Boxing Association welterweight title because he did not wish to surrender three percent of the purse total to the sanctioning body. Independent Online

Damage Control For Smokers

Cigarettes contain a very efficient drug — each puff sends nicotine to the brain within 10 seconds. Soon the brain’s chemical structure actually changes. It becomes hooked into wanting more and more nicotine to make the effects last which is what makes smoking so addictive.

Smoking After-effects

Smoking can cause cancer of the lungs, oesophagus, mouth, pancreas, bladder and kidneys; emphysema, heart disease, a higher incidence of bronchitis and in women cervical cancer as well. It greatly increases the risk of getting coronary artery disease and strokes and reduces the amount of oxygen that reaches the heart.

Smokers are also more prone to chronic illnesses like the flu and viral fevers as their immune levels are lower than that of non-smokers.

On the cosmetic side. smokers have bad breath, yellow teeth and nails, and early wrinkles. They are prone to cataracts, peptic ulcers, reduced fertility and develop behavioural problems.

Smoking also harms family members, co-workers and others who inhale the smoker’s cigarette smoke, which is termed “second-hand smoking.”

Smoking is harmful to the unborn foetus. Re-search has shown that non-smokers who reside with a smoker have a 24 per cent increase in risk for developing lung cancer when compared with other non-smokers. Also, children exposed to second hand smoke can develop asthma.

Kicking the butt

Get rid of all cigarettes. Put away your ashtrays. Change your morning routine. Stay busy and when you get the urge to smoke, do something else instead. Carry other things to put in your mouth, such as gum, hard candy or a toothpick.

The expected consequences of quitting are irritability, difficulty in concentrating, increased appetite, feeling distracted or sleepy, and getting the urge to smoke. But don’t worry because these feelings will pass.

Try to exercise and keep thinking of the positive side to quitting. Several techniques are available to assist people who want to quit including nicotine replacement therapy, behaviour modification therapy, self help literature, prescription medications etc.

After you quit

The symptoms of withdrawal once you stop smoking are the highest in the first week, and can make you think twice about your decision. Many people also believe that damage repair after quitting is not possible. But the fact is that our body repair functions are so strong that once you stop smoking, it automatically repairs the damage.

damage control

When you stop smoking, you feel good, very good. For starters, your breath smells better, your cough goes away, you can taste and smell food better. These benefits happen to men and women of all ages, even those who are older and have a disease or condition caused by smoking. In the long run, quitting cuts the risk of lung and other cancers, heart disease, stroke and other lung or breathing diseases (chronic bronchitis, pneumonia and emphysema).

When you quit, you give your body a chance to repair itself and heal from the damage all that nicotene has caused. In the first 20 minutes of quitting, your blood pressure and pulse rate will get back to normal levels, and within 12 hours the carbon monoxide level in your body comes down to normal.

From two weeks to three months, your circulation improves and the protective layer of your respiratory system called cilia starts recovering so there is an evident change in lung function and stamina.

From one to nine months, coughs and headaches are gone and there is a decrease in anxiety and depression.

At one year, the risk of coronary heart disease is half of what it was when you smoked. In five years’ time after you have quit, your risk of stroke is reduced to that of a non-smoker. In 10 years’ time, the risk of getting lung cancer is halved. After 15 years, the risk of coronary heart disease is like that of a non-smoker unless you have other health problems that cause it. Ex-smokers have better health than current smokers, By Dr Rohit Barman, Deccan Chronicle