Chimp Eden
The Jane Goodall Institute Chimpanzee Eden, commonly referenced as Chimp Eden is a 1,000 ha (2,500 acres) game reserve and animal sanctuary for rescued chimpanzees, in the Umhloti Nature Reserve, near Barberton, Mpumalanga, South Africa. Opened in 2006 by founder and director Eugene Cussons, in collaboration with the Jane Goodall Institute (JGI), its purpose is to provide a permanent and safe home for chimpanzees who are rescued from abusive and unfortunate circumstances from areas where these great apes are being constantly exploited by humans through the bushmeat trade, pet trade and entertainment industries. At the sanctuary, the chimps are rehabilitated with the help of their care takers in being re-introduced back into chimpanzee social skills such as learning how to climb trees and live in a social group with others of their own kind.
Date opened | 2006 |
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Location | Barberton, Mpumalanga, South Africa |
Coordinates | 25.57547°S 31.00466°E |
Land area | 1,000 ha (2,500 acres) |
No. of animals | 33 chimpanzees |
Website | www.chimpeden.com |
Chimp Eden is the only sanctuary for chimpanzees within South Africa. Part of the reserve it is home to game animals such as giraffes, zebras etc, which are also managed and conserved by the director of Chimp Eden. Chimp Eden has rescued chimpanzees from Angola, Sudan, Mozambique, Italy and rescued chimpanzees from the Johannesburg Zoo.
Chimp Eden is a member of the Pan African Sanctuary Alliance.
Chimpanzee enclosures
Juvenile enclosure 1
This enclosure contains 14 chimpanzees, all rescued individuals. Zacarias, an adult male who was rescued from Angola after being found chained to a tree outside a nightclub in Luanda, was the dominant male in the group before being overthrown by Thomas.[1] Joao is an old male who was kept at a zoo in Mozambique.[2] The other members of the group also include Cozy, who was found rescued from Italy where he was kept in solitary confinement and needed rehabilitation. There were also two young females, Zeena, who was rescued from the United Arab Emirates and Sally, who was rescued from Luanda, Angola. In April 2007, five baby chimps (Charlie, Nina, Thomas, Dinka and Zee) were rescued from Sudan where they were all victims of the bushmeat trade. All have also settled in quite remarkably well. The two others, Sampa and Tony, were rescued from Angola where they were being confined to an inhospitable cage. Tony was found to have a cataract in one of his eyes and after a risky operation, he has also regained sight in his eye. Claudine and Claude were also added to the group, but Claude has subsequently been transferred to the adult group where he is also being introduced to both Amadeus and Nikki. Currently in the group are alpha males and females Zacarias, Joao, Cozy, Sampa, Tony, Dinka, Zee, Nina, Sally, Zeena, Charlie, Thomas, Claudine and Thabu. As of April 2013, Nina and her son Thabu, are ongoing a reintegration process after Nina was separated from the group to give birth to Thabu in January 2013.
Juvenile enclosure 2
This enclosure contains 13 chimpanzees, all rescued individuals. Charles, who was rescued from an entertainment circus in South Africa and arrived in December 2008, is the dominant male in the group. The group also contains two adult females, Jessica the dominant female who was rescued from the entertainment circus in South Africa and Martha, who was rescued from being kept in solitary confinement in Ghana. In July 2008, seven babies (Charlene, Marco, Mowgli, Azzie, Bazia, Mary and Tamu) were rescued from Sudan where they were all victims of the bushmeat trade. The other two, Suzie who was rescued from the entertainment industry and Lilly, who was a victim of the bushmeat trade. Currently in the group are alpha males and females Charles, Jessica, Martha, Suzie, Lilly, Marco, Bazia, Mary, Charlene, Mowgli, Tamu, Azzie and Amari.
Adult enclosure 3
This enclosure contains 8 chimpanzees, all rescued individuals and is also the only group composed of adults. Amadeus, who was relocated to the sanctuary from the Johannesburg Zoo, is the dominant male in the group. Amadeus also took over the group after former alpha male Abu, who was relocated to the sanctuary from the Johannesburg Zoo, died. The other members also include Nikki, who was ultimately rescued from being kept as humanized, is the second ranking male. The females also include Jinga, the dominant female who was rescued from a liquor factory, Mimi, who was rescued along with Jinga, Lika, who was rescued from a solitary cage in Luanda, Angola, Josephine, who was rescued from a solitary confinement in a shipping container in Luanda, Angola, and Claudette, who was relocated to the sanctuary from the Johannesburg Zoo. Claude was rescued from Central African Republic and originally introduced to juvenile group 1, but has recently been moved to this enclosure and is also being introduced to both Amadeus and Nikki. Currently in the group are alpha males and females Amadeus, Nikki, Claude, Jinga, Mimi, Josephine, Claudette and Lika.
Accommodation
Chimp Eden also has rustic Wendy house accommodation (en-suite twin bedded rooms in wooden huts) where visitors can rent a place to stay during their visit. There are volunteer programs which enable the recruitment of sufficient keepers as well as adoption scheme which enables the sanctuary to continue its rescue and rehabilitation work with the chimpanzees.
Escape to Chimp Eden
The Chimp Eden sanctuary was featured on the Animal Planet television series, Escape to Chimp Eden. The program covers the work at the sanctuary, daring rescue missions carried out by Chimp Eden founder and director, Eugene Cussons and human elements.
2012 chimpanzee attack on staff member
According to an online news story article written by Rohit Kachroo and other staff from MSNBC World News, and posted on Friday, 29 June 2012,: "An American studying chimpanzee behavior in South Africa was "fighting for his life" after he was attacked by two of the chimpanzees, according to a report. ..." The article stated that the student, Andrew F. Oberle, a primatology graduate student researcher and St. Louis area native in the master's degree program in anthropology at the University of Texas at San Antonio who had been acting as a tour guide, had been rescued by paramedics with an armed escort after the park's owner fired shots at and wounded one of the chimpanzees and fired into the air. He was stabilized, and taken to the Nelspruit, South Africa MediClinic Hospital near Johannesburg; as of that weekend he is in critical but stable condition after a six-hour emergency surgery. For more information, please follow the link to the article.[3]
References
- "Zacarias - Group 2 | The Jane Goodall Institute South Africa". www.chimpeden.com. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
- "Joao - Group 2 | The Jane Goodall Institute South Africa". www.chimpeden.com. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
- Rohit Kachroo; Staff writers (29 June 2012). "US student fighting for life after chimps attack at South Africa's Jane Goodall Institute". NBC News. Archived from the original on 1 July 2012. Retrieved 21 October 2012.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)