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Saturday, July 14, 2007 | Reason : In the News | print version Print | Comments |

Document Found: the giant lion-eating chimps of the magic forest

by James Randerson, Guardian

Thanks to Happy Hominid for the link.

Reposted from:
http://environment.guardian.co.uk/conservation/story/0,,2126328,00.html

Deep in the Congolese jungle is a band of apes that, according to local legend, kill lions, catch fish and even howl at the moon. Local hunters speak of massive creatures that seem to be some sort of hybrid between a chimp and a gorilla.

Their location at the centre of one of the bloodiest conflicts on the planet, the civil war in the Democratic Republic of Congo, has meant that the mystery apes have been little studied by western scientists. Reaching the region means negotiating the shifting fortunes of warring rebel factions, and the heart of the animals' range is deep in impenetrable forest.

But despite the difficulties, a handful of scientists have succeeded in studying the animals. Early speculation that the apes may be some yeti-like new species or a chimp/gorilla hybrid proved unfounded, but the truth has turned out to be in many ways even more fascinating. They are actually a population of super-sized chimps with a unique culture - and it seems, a taste for big cat flesh.
The most detailed and recent data comes from Cleve Hicks, at the University of Amsterdam, who has spent 18 months in the field watching the Bili apes - named after a local town - since 2004. His team's most striking find came after one of his trackers heard chimps calling for several days from the same spot.

When he investigated he came across a chimp feasting on the carcass of a leopard. Mr Hicks cannot be sure the animal was killed by the chimp, but the find lends credence to the apes' lion-eating reputation.

"What we have found is this completely new chimpanzee culture," said Mr Hicks. Previously, researchers had only managed to snatch glimpses of the animals or take photos of them using camera traps. But Mr Hicks used local knowledge to get closer to them and photograph them.

"We were told of this sort of fabled land out west by one of our trackers who goes out there to fish," said Mr Hicks whose project is supported by the Wasmoeth Wildlife Foundation. "I call it the magic forest. It is a very special place."

Getting there means a gruelling 40km (25-mile) trek through the jungle, from the nearest road, not to mention navigating croc-infested rivers. But when he arrived he found apes without their normal fear of humans. Chimps near the road flee immediately at the sight of people because they know the consequences of a hunter's rifle, but these animals were happy to approach him. "The further away from the road the more fearless the chimps got," he added.

Mr Hicks reports that he found a unique chimp culture. For example, unlike their cousins in other parts of Africa the chimps regularly bed down for the night in nests on the ground. Around a fifth of the nests he found were there rather than in the trees.

"How can they get away with sleeping on the ground when there are lions, leopards, golden cats around as well as other dangerous animals like elephants and buffalo?" said Mr Hicks.

"I don't like to paint them as being more aggressive, but maybe they prey on some of these predators and the predators kind of leave them alone." He is keen to point out though that they don't howl at the moon.

"The ground nests were very big and there was obviously something very unusual going on there. They are not unknown elsewhere but very unusual," said Colin Groves, an expert on primate morphology at the Australian National University in Canberra who has observed the nests in the field.

Prof Groves believes that the Bili apes should prompt a radical rethink of the family tree of chimp sub-species. He has proposed that primatologists should now recognise five different sub-divisions instead of the current four.

Mr Hicks said the animals also have what he calls a "smashing culture" - a blunt but effective way of solving problems. He has found hundreds of snails and hard-shelled fruits smashed for food, seen chimps carrying termite mounds to rocks to break them open and also found a turtle that was almost certainly smashed apart by chimps.

Like chimp populations in other parts of Africa, the Bili chimps use sticks to fish for ants, but here the tools are up to 2.5 metres long.

The most exciting thing about this population of chimps though is that it is much bigger than anyone realised and may be one of the largest remaining continuous populations of the species left in Africa. Mr Hicks and his colleague Jeroen Swinkels surveyed an area of 7,000 square kilometres and found chimps everywhere. Their unique culture was uniform throughout.

However, the future for the Bili apes is far from secure. "Things are not promising," said Karl Ammann, an independent wildlife photographer who began investigating the apes 1996. "The absence of a strong central government has resulted in most of the region becoming more independent and lawless. In conservation terms this is a disaster."

Comments 1 - 19 of 19 |

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1. Comment #56218 by bluebird on July 14, 2007 at 2:08 pm

 avatarThe future of Mountain Gorillas in the Congo is not secure either.

www.gorillafund.org
The environment is always a casuality of war.

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2. Comment #56243 by Nails on July 14, 2007 at 3:27 pm

 avatarPhotos please!!!
Videos would be better though.
And how frustrating that it had to be called "magic forest".
That annoys me nearly as much as selling scientifically formulated plant food as "miricle gro"

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3. Comment #56261 by EndlessForms on July 14, 2007 at 4:33 pm

 avatarHere's a site with some pictures:
http://www.karlammann.com/bili.php

One apparently from a camrea trap (http://www.karlammann.com/bili12.php), and another which looks like a dead one, being held up by some locals (http://www.karlammann.com/bili13.php).

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4. Comment #56313 by Hugo on July 14, 2007 at 11:37 pm

 avatarNails, we should not limit our language just because religion and other fantasies attaches their meanings to words we can take those words back :-)

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5. Comment #56345 by Yorker on July 15, 2007 at 7:12 am

Something seems wrong here.

I can accept the leopard story since they are forest dwelling ambush predators, but lions? How do the chimps hunt them? Lions are not forest dwellers so either they enter the chimp environment or vice-versa. No, I'm not going to accept this until I see much more convincing evidence concerning these lion-eating chimps, it's a little er'...hard to swallow!

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6. Comment #56348 by bluebird on July 15, 2007 at 7:46 am

 avatarYorker,
Is there something fishy in Denmark??
More clues~~~~

Search the Web for
Lost Apes of the Congo

Other Comments by bluebird

7. Comment #56369 by konquererz on July 15, 2007 at 10:23 am

 avatarI seems a little fishy to me as well. I like the general premise of the story, it seems easy enough to verify if the people exist. But I wasn't aware that there were lions in the deep congo. I would be nice to see some photo's or some kind of scientific journal or other reputable report.

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8. Comment #56379 by Kellan on July 15, 2007 at 12:52 pm

Deep in the Congolese jungle is a band of apes that, according to local legend, kill lions, catch fish and even howl at the moon.


I don't think there's any indication that they actually do hunt lions.

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9. Comment #56380 by Bonzai on July 15, 2007 at 1:29 pm

 avatarAre they the African version of the big foot?

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10. Comment #56382 by bluebird on July 15, 2007 at 2:02 pm

 avatarMaybe, "...Yeti in the forest".

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11. Comment #56386 by Salvatore on July 15, 2007 at 2:35 pm

 avatarWhat the article says:

There is a population of rather large chimpanzees that sleep on the ground more than other chimpanzees and use long sticks to get termites.

What the article wants to say:

There is a secret population of giant chimpanzees that use 2.5 meter spears to hunt lions and leopards and are so fearsome elephants and buffalo avoid them, and they don't mind chilling with people if you don't shoot at them, but they're awfully aggressive and would really like to lay some GBH on your ugly hairless arses, and they are also bigfoot.

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12. Comment #56485 by BT Murtagh on July 16, 2007 at 2:31 am

 avatarLion may be being used as a shorthand for big cat - let's not be overly literal.

"His words are not to be taken literally - by 'Blessed are the cheesemakers' he means any manufacturer of dairy products."

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13. Comment #56517 by Yorker on July 16, 2007 at 5:20 am

12. Comment #56485 by BT Murtagh

The article mentions lion-killing and eating specifically; hunting in other words. In a scientific claim like this, use of language in a non-literal way would be both wrong and silly since it's of major importance that facts are presented unambiguously Therefore, I think we should take this literally, after all, that's why we have many different words that mean similar, but not the same things!

It is well known that chimps are meat lovers but stating that they kill and eat big cats is an extraordinary claim requiring extraordinary evidence, this article fails to provide it.

Other Comments by Yorker

14. Comment #56530 by bamboospitfire on July 16, 2007 at 6:38 am

 avatarOn the lion-killing point.

"...according to local legend, kill lions..."

So, the killing of lions is just a local legend. The article says that the chimps have "a taste for big cat flesh" based on the discovery of a chimp "feasting on the carcass of a leopard". Whilst this "lends credence to the apes' lion-eating reputation", neither the article nor Mr Hicks ever suggests or seeks to suggest that lion-killing (or even leopard-killing) has been proven.

Other Comments by bamboospitfire

15. Comment #306548 by cleve on December 25, 2008 at 8:05 am

I have enjoyed reading all of the comments on our Bili apes research. Photos and films of the Bili apes are available at www.wasmoethwildlife.org. You can read 2 ebooks telling the story of my study of the Bili apes up until February 2007.
Regarding big cat predation by chimps, in 2007 our most trusted field assistant Ligada Faustin observed a chimpanzee in the Gangu forest eating a leopard carcass. He took detailed notes on the event and also brought back a leopard paw as evidence. From this limited information we obviously cannot know whether or not the chimpanzee actually killed the leopard.
Sadly, the Bili Project has now ended because of the gold mining invasion of June 2007, and hostility towards the community conservation project. I have spent the last year surveying the nearby forests of Aketi and Buta. Unfortunately we have uncovered evidence of a massacre of chimpanzees: 34 orphans for sale and 31 carcasses. In addition, okapis, elephants and hippos are being slaughtered. This is all tied to the uncontrolled artisenal diamond and gold mining industry that is exploding in this formerly near pristine area. Currently there is not a single conservation project active in this huge area. At risk are okapis, elephants and the largest and most continuous population of chimpanzees left on the planet (with a Mega-culture spread across thousands of square km). We are looking for ideas on how to stop this imminent destruction.
Cleve Hicks
The Bili Apes Project

Other Comments by cleve

16. Comment #306550 by cleve on December 25, 2008 at 8:15 am

Sorry, there is a slight error in my last post. Ligada saw the leopard being eaten in September 2006, not 2007. You can see a photo of Ligada with 'The Paw' in the second Bili Ape ebook at www.wasmoethwildlife.org.
Cleve

Other Comments by cleve

17. Comment #306551 by cleve on December 25, 2008 at 8:23 am

By the way, Yorker, that is one of the most fascinating things about the Gangu Forest. Lions and hyenas venture deep into it. We have found the tracks of lions pursuing red river hogs up to 4 km from the nearest savanna woodland/savanna. Hyenas make it even farther into the deep forest. I get the feeling that there all sorts of strange evolutionary undercurrents going on in this zone of intersection between forest and savnna.
Cleve

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18. Comment #306559 by MaxD on December 25, 2008 at 10:41 am

 avatarThanks for the update on the conservation issues in Africa, though it isn't terribly uplifting.

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19. Comment #306560 by MaxD on December 25, 2008 at 10:44 am

 avatarAlso on the lion in jungles point. Lions on the whole used to be vastly more widespread than mos of their current distribution and are not unknown to inhabit forests, at least one forest dwelling non-african population exists in India in the Gir forest.

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