YAOUNDÉ — It’s not uncommon to see chimpanzees kept as pets in private homes and hotels in Guinea-Bissau. Chimpanzees can be seen chained to trees or metal poles, or living alone in small metal cages, often without a permanent water source and lacking room to walk or jump around. Maria Joana Ferreira da Silva, a Portuguese researcher from the Research Center in Biodiversity and Genetic Resources at the University of Porto in Portugal, published an assessment of the illegal trade of chimpanzees in in the journal Conservation Letters in February. She writes that no systematic survey of the trade has been carried out across Guinea-Bissau, but cites a 2020 survey conducted by Guinea-Bissau’s Institute for Biodiversity and Protected Areas (IBAP). Conducted in the central region of Bafatá and the southern regions of Tombali and Quinara, it found 98 people there kept wild-born primates in captivity. Among these were five chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes); the majority of the captive animals were patas monkeys (Erythrocebus patas). Ferreira da Silva’s own fieldwork between 2006 and 2022 recorded 18 chimpanzees being held in homes or hotels. The chimpanzees’ captors told IBAP researchers they had bought the animals as infants from hunters who had either killed their mothers for the meat, or targeted the troops specifically to get infants for sale. Despite it being illegal to hunt or keep chimpanzees, they freely admitted to keeping the apes captive and invited strangers to take photographs with them. According to Ferreira da Silva, most captive chimpanzees die of…This article was originally published on Mongabay
Search
Recent Research
Got something to publicise on the Enconverge Website?
Research
Featured News
Wildlife crime crackdown in jeopardy worldwide after US funding cuts
In 2019, Malawi registered a massive win in the fight against the illegal wildlife trade.
In Panama, an Indigenous-led project rewrites the rules of reforestation
ÑÜRÜM, Panama — Isidrio Hernandez-Ruiz has a soft spot for the bright yellow flowers of
Climate change now threatens thousands of species on Earth
In the last decade, report after report has warned that the Arctic is heating up
EU anti-deforestation law could overlook big violators, NGO warns
The European Union’s landmark anti-deforestation law could fail to deliver on its environmental promises if
To collect native seeds, Ugandan botanists are climbing forest giants
The mvule (Milicia excelsa) is a giant of a tree, up to 50 meters (165
Fighting back against Guinea-Bissau’s illegal chimpanzee trade
YAOUNDÉ — It’s not uncommon to see chimpanzees kept as pets in private homes and
Bangladesh protects sacred forests to strengthen biodiversity conservation
With an aim to protect biodiversity that’s become fragmented and is scattered across the country,
Radheshyam Bishnoi, protector of India’s wildlife, died on May 24, 2025, aged 28
Radheshyam Bishnoi was born with a calling to save wildlife. From a young age, he