Wildside Binti the Gorilla
Binti the gorilla made headlines all over the world with her humanitarian act. Gorillas can be both aggressive and amiable to humans. The wildside section discusses unusual animal activities and grassroots conservation projects.
Binti, Interspecies Relations:
Wildlife Conservation Some Thoughts on a
Humanitarian Act
All content © by Diana L. Guerrero unless otherwise noted and may not be reprinted without prior written permission. All rights reserved. Contact arkanimals.com for reprint permissions and fees. Copyright © By Dr. Anthony Rose
With the interest of people across North America focused on an
event involving a captive gorilla and an injured human child, it
seems timely to post some of my findings and thoughts about such
events.
I have been collecting & analyzing data, writing, and talking about
human-wildlife interaction for quite a few years. In fact, on the
day that Binti the gorilla was helping save a human life at Brookfield
Zoo, I was giving a paper at a conference in Montreal about how
profound interspecies events (PIEs: Rose, 1994) of different types
effect our perceptions of other animals and alter our world-view
(Rose, 1996d). A few days earlier we heard from a panel of distinguished
primatologists in a roundtable I organized on a similar topic for
the IPS/ASP Congress (Rose, 1996b).
Binti's altruistic action, and Jambo's (P-T: 8/29), and the monkey
that fed the WW2 pilot in the tree (PT:8/30), are part of a long
list of interventions in which other animals approach, help, and
affect humans in need. Marc Cusano's rescue by the alpha chimpanzee
"Old Man" at Lion Country Safari (Goodall, 1993) is oft cited and
has served as a model for those events in which great apes and other
wild/non-domestic animals Seek A Friendly Encounter with a human
(SAFE Scenario; Rose, 1996a).
While some argue whether these are natural (innate) or learned behaviors,
it is generally felt that they are both evolutionary and experientially
developed and driven. Chimpanzee alphas have been observed breaking
up fights in their groups (Boehm, 1994) -- Cusano had become a member
of the group, so Old Man charged into the fray, pulled the attackers
off his buddy Marc, and stood guard (Cusano, 1995).
Gorillas adopt and care for injured and orphaned youngsters in their
communities (Fossey, 1985) -- Binti has learned to include humans
in her community, so she cares for the fallen human child. This
may sound matter of fact, but it is far from it in my view.
No matter what the circumstance, it is profoundly important to have
evidence of the way other primates include us in their social groups,
consider us as friends, and care for us as kin. Cusano was integrated
into the chimpanzee groups he tended at Lion Country Safari for
7 years -- his interactive learnings go way beyond the Old Man rescue
in year two. I spent a day discussing these experiences with Marc
and only scratched the surface. Binti has come to consider humans
other than her keepers as part of her kinship group -- her interactive
and instructive potential is unquestionably expanded.
Biologists and comparative psychologists are long overdue in systematizing
the study of human involvement in interspecies phenomena. In this
world where humans impinge with increasing frequency and vigor on
every other animal, we need to investigate our interaction with
others as much as their "normal" behavior with our influence minimized.
As a wildlife conservationist, I have focused on interaction among
varied groups of humans, apes, and other primates. Stanford (1996)
writes that chimpanzees refrain from hunting colobus when the monkeys
are being followed by strange human researchers. When the chimps
are habituated to human trackers, the predation rate increases (presumably
to normal).
Questions arise. When the gorilla, chimp, or bonobo habituates to
researchers (or tourists), how does it learn to differentiate and
avoid its human hunters? How can one keep habituated apes from over
close approach to familiar researchers and friendly tourists (to
avoid disease transmission) without driving them off altogether?
In what ways are ape and monkey cultures adapting to and learning
from even the most stand-offish human interlopers? These questions
all relate to the non-human primates' reactions to shifts in the
perceived behavior of humans from predator to observer to caretaker
to kin (See Davis & Balfour,1993).
The human side of these processes is at least as important, not
only to better understand the animals, but to better manage ourselves
in relation to them. The health and science inclination to neutralize
human impact on the animals is begging the question -- there is
always impact of observer on the observed. We must study and determine
the value and importance of the interactions, both ways.
I am concerned about the development of positive conservation values.
My research on the events that cause the human world-view to shift
from anthropocentric to bio-centric strongly indicates that a potent
factor in transforming a human into a protector of wildlife is friendly
interaction with the animals needing protection (Rose, 1996a,d).
This is likely to hold for bushmeat hunters as it does for students,
zoo-keepers, and ethologists.
This is why I am looking at the development of wildlife sanctuaries
and education centers as a key element in the African forest bushmeat
programme (Rose, 1996c). Given the choice of letting an orphan gorilla
die or helping it become part of a local program to teach people
to respect and care for the apes, I will opt for the latter. If
we expand and use what we know about the effects of wildlife interaction
on human values, we will be able to speed the development and long-term
effectiveness of community-based conservation efforts.
As I step up my research with focus on the African bushmeat crisis,
I need more input regarding inter-species interaction involving
humans and wild or captive nonhuman primates. I am especially looking
for anecdotes and studies that may reflect on the shift of humans
from predator to protector, both in behavior and in human self-perception.
So I ask all of you who have information about such experiences
with other primates, or any other "wild" animals for that matter,
to contribute to our data base. It would be valuable to share such
stories here on PT -- exploring these events with others can enrich
our understanding On the other hand, I know that many of these tales
and findings are tenuous and private, and so I also invite you to
write, call, fax, or e-mail me directly if you want to contribute,
or become involved in any way.
The Binti story is a profound event that is instructive and symbolic.
When a human child who lost his parents falls into gentle gorilla
hands and is saved, it is a signal for us to return the favor. Today
in central Africa a gorilla baby struggles in the hands of a hunter
deciding whether to keep it or kill it, while the mother is being
butchered for the meat market. We must engender the will to protect
natural heritage in the hunter and all who support the commercial
bushmeat trade, if we are to save these babies and protect their
mothers and fathers. Our humanity and the survival of great apes
depends on it.
References:
Boehm, C., 1994. Personal communication, Claremont, California.
Cusano, M., 1995. Personal communication, West Palm Beach, Florida.
Davis, H.; Balfour, A. D. 1993. The Inevitable Bond: Examining Scientist-Animal
Interactions. New York, Cambridge University Press.
Fossey, D., 1985. Gorillas in the Mist. Houghton-Mifflin, Boston,
1983.
Goodall, J., 1993. Chimpanzees -- bridging the gap. P. 17 in Cavalieri,
P.; Singer, P. (eds.), The Great Ape Project, St. Martin's Press,
New York.
Rose, A. L., 1996d. Epiphanies with Animals and Nature Transform
the Human Weltbildapparatur. Paper for Symposium on Human-Animal
Interaction, International Society of Comparative Pschology, Montreal,
1996.
Rose, A. L., 1996c. The African Great Ape Bushmeat Crisis. Workshop
conducted at the Joint Congress of International Primatological
Society & American Society of Primatologists, Madison, Wisc..
Rose, A. L., 1996b. Breaking the Silence: Enhancing the Use of Personal
Experience in Primatology. Panel/Round-table designed and chaired
for Joint Congress of International Primatological Society & American
Society of Primatologists, Madison, Wisc..
Rose, A. L., 1996a. Orangutan, Science, and Collective Reality.
Pp. 29 -- 40 in Orangutan -- TheNeglected Ape. (Eds: R. Nadler,
B. Galdikas, N. Rosen, & L. Sheeran), Plenum Press, New York.
Rose, A. L., 1994. Description & Analysis of Profound Interspecies
Events (Pies). Scientific paper in Proceedings of the XVth Congress
of International Primatological Society, Bali, Indonesia.
Stanford, C., 1996. The Colobus and the Chimpanzee. Harvard U. Press,
Cambridge, Mass. (in press).
About the Author: Dr. Anthony Rose is a social psychologist and writer, director of
the Biosynergy Institute, and founder of The Bushmeat Project, building
international partnerships to help the people of equatorial Africa
develop alternatives to eating apes and other endangered wildlife.
Anthony Rose has spent the past decade investigating humankind's profound
relationships to wildlife and nature. He has written two novels
that focus on the human-ape connection, lectured to international
conferences, published articles in scientific anthologies and journals,
studied people and primates in Africa, Central America, and Asia.
Dr. Rose can be reached at: ALRose@biosynergy.org or hq@biosynergy.org
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