Primate IO
Primate IO
  • Видео 9
  • Просмотров 260 195
Chimpanzees Use Medicine - News Station (Asahi TV) Special Program Series, Feb. 1992
A popular evening news program of Asahi TV aired between 1985 to 2004.
The program presents on national TV for the first news about recent research findings demonstrating the anti-parasitic properties of medicinal plants by chimpanzees in the Mahale Mountains of Tanzania. Featuring researchers Michael A Huffman, Koichi Koshimizu of Kyoto University.
Просмотров: 1 011

Видео

Gorilla Society
Просмотров 19 тыс.3 года назад
Gorillas of Kahuzi Beige, DR Congo; Hosted by Prof. Junichiro Itani, presented by Juichi Yamagiwa. This is a documentary from a multi-part special series called “Human - In Search of the Roots of Humankind". This was originally produced by the University of the Air in Japanese as borrowed video course material. Later the scripts were translated into and narrated by Michael A Huffman (Kyoto Univ...
The Society of Japanese Macaques
Просмотров 13 тыс.3 года назад
This is a documentary from a multi-part special series called “Human - In Search of the Roots of Humankind". This was originally produced by the University of the Air in Japanese as borrowed video course material. Later the scripts were translated into and narrated by Michael A Huffman (Kyoto University) in collaboration with Professor Itani to share the information with an international audien...
新ニホンザル学 - 21世紀への科学 1984
Просмотров 3223 года назад
"New perspectives in Japanese macaque studies - Science in the 21st Century" (1984) NHK. Featuring Prof. Junichiro Itani, with Yukio Takahata, Michael A Huffman (Kyoto University primatologists). The history of Japanese primatology is presented by one of the pioneers in the field and some recent findings (at the time) are presented by two of his students in this NHK special program. This video ...
The Society of Chimpanzees
Просмотров 189 тыс.3 года назад
Chimpanzees of Mahale, Tanzania: Hosted by Prof. Junichiro Itani, presented by Prof. Toshisada Nishida (Translation and voice over by Michael A Huffman). This is a documentary from a multi-part special series called “Human - In Search of the Roots of Humankind". This was originally produced by the University of the Air in Japanese as borrowed video course material. Later the scripts were transl...
Social Groups of Prosimians
Просмотров 2,6 тыс.3 года назад
Series General Introduction & Introduction of the Prosimians of Berenty, and elsewhere in Madagascar: Hosted by Prof. Junichiro Itani, presented by Prof. Naoki Koyama (Translation and voice over by Michael A Huffman). This is a documentary from a multi-part special series called “Human - In Search of the Roots of Humankind". This was originally produced by the University of the Air in Japanese ...
New World Monkeys of Macarena, Colombia
Просмотров 11 тыс.3 года назад
Hosted by Prof. Junichiro Itani, Prof. Kosei Izawa, and Akisato Nishimura (Translation and voice over by Michael A Huffman) This is a documentary from a multi-part special series called “Human - In Search of the Roots of Humankind". This was originally produced by the University of the Air in Japanese as borrowed video course material. Later the scripts were translated into and narrated by Mich...
Orangutan Society
Просмотров 24 тыс.3 года назад
Presented by Prof. Junichiro Itani and Assistant Professor Akira Suzuki. This is a documentary from a multi-part special series called “Human - In Search of the Roots of Humankind". This was originally produced by the University of the Air in Japanese as borrowed video course material. Later the scripts were translated into and narrated by Michael A Huffman (Kyoto University) in collaboration w...
Yukimaru Sugiyama: A Pioneer of Primatology in Japan
Просмотров 1,5 тыс.3 года назад
Yukimaru Sugiyama is a primatologist who has performed a wide range of scientific field studies since the 1950s. Here we present an interview filmed at the Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University with the aim to better understand the early days of primatology in Japan and to share his insights.

Комментарии

  • @aliahmed6771
    @aliahmed6771 2 дня назад

    music sounds like a 1980s final fantasy game its so jap lol

  • @JaDaddy2438
    @JaDaddy2438 9 дней назад

    When they make a battery drill, give me a call. Tool use.......please

  • @averagejoe8849
    @averagejoe8849 Месяц назад

    33:42 ok didn’t know this was going to include some chimp flavored kiddie porn.

  • @renapoole7742
    @renapoole7742 Месяц назад

    this was a awesome video. Thank you for putting it in English. I enjoyed all of this. Thanks.😄❤️

  • @latralla4577
    @latralla4577 2 месяца назад

    I'm happy to find this extraordinary interview and listen to prof. Sugiyama's wise words. I wish him a long and healthy life with new and rewarding discoveries! Thank you for sharing the footage.

  • @ianspingle8865
    @ianspingle8865 7 месяцев назад

    Great documentary, I still don't know how people still eat chimps bush meat in Africa it's basically cannibalism 💀

    • @lilirishgrl
      @lilirishgrl 4 месяца назад

      I feel the same way. How could they

  • @vincentjacobsson3981
    @vincentjacobsson3981 Год назад

    SAVE THE ECOSYSTEM WITH VEGO FOOD!

  • @badmonkey2222
    @badmonkey2222 Год назад

    Why are Japanese so curious to study chimps but treat them so horribly and keep them in horrid conditions at zoos on Japan??!! They have had 15 baby chimp deaths at the most notorious zoo in Japan most of the chimps have lost all their hair due to sickness and mental abuse and anguish, they only feed them once a day and they food is thrown on to fecies and urine on the ground the enclosure is filthy and to small!!! Great work Japan.

  • @ForestGirlTeresa
    @ForestGirlTeresa Год назад

    Interesting information. I found the orangutans’ mating vocalizations fascinating!

  • @360Fov
    @360Fov Год назад

    He makes a damn good point; it's easy to find the use of tools impressive, because they're very self-evident....but being able to process the absolutely miniscule signals and fine nuanced behaviours that lead to the social structure in a troop is so much more impressive. Honestly it's hard to believe...they run around screaming and throwing things, and it seems like they're just erratic....yet somehow they pickup on who is doing what, and then deliver retribution later in the day if needed...that's so crazy to comprehend.

  • @Shelly58485
    @Shelly58485 Год назад

    Amazing ,we can see the way they live..thanks for sharing ❤

  • @morgaduportuguesh9597
    @morgaduportuguesh9597 Год назад

    Tanaiçe neutro

  • @Shelly58485
    @Shelly58485 Год назад

    So interesting thanks for sharing ❤

  • @man_in_red
    @man_in_red Год назад

    Its so sad the females with the young live in the secondary forrest which is also the easiest to hunt them for the babies to sell. Its heart breaking. These animals seem so human. The forrest humans. And this guy saying chimps and orangs have similar social structure. That couldnt be the farther from the truth. Orangs live there entires lives alone. Chimps live in clans. Chimps are extremely aggressive and orangs are about as civilized and uncombatent as you can possibly be possibly get and still be wild.

    • @SKILLIUSCAESAR
      @SKILLIUSCAESAR 11 месяцев назад

      Orangs live alone? No family units??

    • @badmonkey2222
      @badmonkey2222 10 месяцев назад

      They don't just seem human they 95% of our DNA, gorillas have 96% and chimpanzees are our closest relatives with 97% of our DNA 🧬🐵 🦧 🦍🙋

  • @kishansinhaed2727
    @kishansinhaed2727 Год назад

    I like this chimpanzee so I want alive

  • @shaindaman13
    @shaindaman13 Год назад

    More scientific discrepancies among these egg-headed Primatologist that just cannot get together in their numbers. States plainly here the babies stay with the mother until the age of 5 or 6 years. When all these rescue groups railing against Palm Oil plantations will tell you it’s 9-10 of their first years. They’re all over the place. There are way WAY more of these nasty lice covered things climbing through the Bornean and Sumatran jungles too, I’d be willing to bet. Their numbers are all over the place there’s too. Studying them by watching these documentaries will only confuse you more. For example…a brand new, undiscovered third subspecies, the Tunuli was made in 2017. Completely unknown. But somehow they knew in the same documentary there are 800 of them left. Now how the fuck would they know that if they just now discovered the thing? Here’s how. They don’t. That jungle is way too dense for them to have any clue. It’s a guess to play on people’s sympathies, anthropomorphising them so people send money to their cause.

  • @refiii9499
    @refiii9499 Год назад

    Now this is how a chimpanzee documentary should be done. The way they show in depth how they greet ea other and how the alpha gets different greetings from all others is one example that every other documentary fails to provide. I’m 7 minutes into this documentary and am much more enthusiastic about watching it. All the other documentary’s I’ve watched are showing how JG try’s to give them chocolate or them eating other monkeys or them fighting. That’s not what I’m wanting to see. This already is far superior.

  • @jamesrogalski2085
    @jamesrogalski2085 Год назад

    I thought all ants are full of formic acid, wouldn't the smell alone drive them from consuming them?

  • @lilirishgrl
    @lilirishgrl Год назад

    Great informative documentary. Thanks

  • @TJ28628
    @TJ28628 Год назад

    These are members of our family!! They're beautiful!!

  • @Whxterose8060
    @Whxterose8060 Год назад

    27:04 I know football when I see football.

  • @mattias969
    @mattias969 Год назад

    Zoo's that keep these tree people prisoner should be shut down

  • @charlesdaniels4082
    @charlesdaniels4082 Год назад

    If I had one wish I wish I was in dickcy huray huray with goregy porgy pudding pie 🥧 kiss 😘 the girls and made them cry Georgy porgy pudding pie 🥧 kiss the girls and made them cry then came out and bit the crap out of my sister

  • @TheImmoralNosferatuZodd
    @TheImmoralNosferatuZodd Год назад

    37:36 or maybe he smoked a blunt, and is just chillin?

  • @TheImmoralNosferatuZodd
    @TheImmoralNosferatuZodd Год назад

    33:44 Ugh! Look at these pedo cougars

  • @TheImmoralNosferatuZodd
    @TheImmoralNosferatuZodd Год назад

    33:33 Damn! Now we know he's the Alpha. 🦴🥒🍌🥖🌭🍆🥕🌽

  • @TheImmoralNosferatuZodd
    @TheImmoralNosferatuZodd Год назад

    31:59 Nice Guy

  • @TheImmoralNosferatuZodd
    @TheImmoralNosferatuZodd Год назад

    31:04 HAHAHAHAHA!

  • @TheImmoralNosferatuZodd
    @TheImmoralNosferatuZodd Год назад

    30:42 look at his little wang

  • @HOLLASOUNDS
    @HOLLASOUNDS Год назад

    This is an old but valuable documentary about Chimpanzees, sadly since the 90s wild Chimpanzees are significantly less at around 250.000. If deforestation does not stop then they will go extinct by around 2055.

    • @lilirishgrl
      @lilirishgrl 4 месяца назад

      It’s so depressing

    • @HOLLASOUNDS
      @HOLLASOUNDS 4 месяца назад

      @@lilirishgrl Chimpanzee, Orangutan, Banobo, Gorilla great apes and many animals such as Rhino, Tiger set for extinction by 2055.

  • @shannonspage9360
    @shannonspage9360 Год назад

    The range of the territory is large, obviously the alpha male isn't everywhere with everyone at any given time. If someone catches prey or finds a prized food item while out on their own I am sure plenty of thus never goes through the alpha male. The males spend a lot of time defending and surveying the outer perimeter of the troops territory. Also as mentioned in the film, I am sure females that aren't particularly impressive by the males or politics of a troop they maybe more inclined to check out a neighboring troop. Since females give birth to very few offspring in their lifetime they are selective about who they choose as reproductive partners.

    • @spatrk6634
      @spatrk6634 Год назад

      they rarely go around alone. and chimps share food with others regardless of contribution. especially with other individuals that they like. females are not really selective about who they choose to reproduce with. and they get one baby every 5 years on average. they’re quite promiscuous. Male chimpanzees compete for females and copulate with as many as possible. Females copulate with multiple males not only to conceive young but also as a sexual favor that’s repaid by more favorable treatment from males, such as food sharing and protection. Such female behavior creates a state of “paternity confusion” in which males are more caring toward females they’ve copulated with, and toward the young of those females, because they recognize that they might be the father of those offspring chimpanzee mating system reminds me of someone. Gorillas are much less promiscuous, and one dominant silverback has uncontested dominion over a harem of females. With so little competition, they don’t need to produce as much sperm to ensure their paternity, so they have little bitty testicles relative to their body size, despite being much larger in body than chimps. Other than humans, the most nearly monogamous apes are gibbons, which form one-on-one pair bonds and usually mate for life. But like humans, even they mess around a bit (extrapair copulations) and sometimes divorce.

    • @360Fov
      @360Fov Год назад

      Chimp perimeter surveys are a troop activity. They create a kinetic sonic reporting chain by reverberating specific hoots and pants whenever a prize food is found, instinctually, they can't help it. There are outliers that are devious, and will spot something and wait for the troop to disperse or sleep, and then try to get hold of the food for themselves, but in general, they basically self snitch, and whenever one hears the hooting of 'i found something of value', they also make the sound, but they double up the panting sounds, and so on and so forth as the sound passes from chimp to chimp, eventually it arrives at the alpha, who doesn't have an imperative to 'pass the sound on' so to speak. Then the alpha will be able to navigate back to the source of the sound because the the panting sound gets thinner and thinner in the direction....almost like an invisible rope that they follow. I made everything up after the first full stop.

  • @hugobaires2113
    @hugobaires2113 2 года назад

    Thank you very much great video ur explanation is great

  • @catherine5558
    @catherine5558 2 года назад

    Thank you for uploading :)

  • @plasticsaint
    @plasticsaint 2 года назад

    this one was hard to understand with the thick accents

  • @obolbool4420
    @obolbool4420 2 года назад

    Ni

  • @Rod1712
    @Rod1712 2 года назад

    They behave just like us.

  • @Pinkpanter.plastering
    @Pinkpanter.plastering 2 года назад

    There gorgeous how cuddly I would love to cuddle with one snuggle right into it’s lovely warm coat would and sleep well snuggled up with one beautiful little monkeys ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @averyparticularsetofskills
    @averyparticularsetofskills 2 года назад

    This was informative BUT the "sweeping" audio from left to both ears during the segments with music was agitating.

  • @averyparticularsetofskills
    @averyparticularsetofskills 2 года назад

    That was super well put together...I have to be honest I thought I wouldn't make it more than 5 mins in for whatever reasons but I find myself craving another documentary with this man and these chimpanzees. 👍👍

    • @HOLLASOUNDS
      @HOLLASOUNDS Год назад

      This is an old Japanese documentary from the 90s. The person you should be thankful for is the one who did the English translation and who saved this old video from being lost.

    • @huradaniel172
      @huradaniel172 Год назад

      Rise of apes documentary war chimps. It's a good watch. It's not this guy though.

    • @glenndouglas8822
      @glenndouglas8822 Год назад

      ​​@@huradaniel172 it's..Rise Of The Warrior Apes...👍

  • @toddwilliams1380
    @toddwilliams1380 2 года назад

    Absolutely loved this !! Love these beautiful animals!! 🦍🦍🦍🦍🦍

  • @Newport8187
    @Newport8187 2 года назад

    chimps are gross 🤮

  • @jjoshi4858
    @jjoshi4858 2 года назад

    One thing I noticed is that the camera dude is extremely close to the chimpanzees, especially at 7:20, 7:45 and 8:48. It seems that the chimps don't mind them being their and they aren't a threat.

    • @Rod1712
      @Rod1712 2 года назад

      After a while chimpanzees get used to the presence of man.

    • @jjoshi4858
      @jjoshi4858 2 года назад

      @@Rod1712 that makes sense

    • @Rod1712
      @Rod1712 2 года назад

      @@jjoshi4858 🙂

    • @spatrk6634
      @spatrk6634 Год назад

      yes. they dont care about another ape being there if you are non threatening.

    • @jjoshi4858
      @jjoshi4858 Год назад

      Yea and you don't really have to worry about getting hurt by the chimps in the wild unless you're messing with them or one of them is doing a display and either bashes into you or throws something in your direction. I've done more research since that comment.

  • @islanders1329fan
    @islanders1329fan 2 года назад

    Very baffling how some people think they can raise one as a pet. Doesn’t matter at all if someone adopts it when it’s an infant baby at like 3 days old and socialize it among humans right away and also treat it and raise it like a baby child of your own, because in the end they are still a wild animal that’s gonna do what chimps always do when they’ve grown into a fully grown adult. They’ll have the strength of 5 men, become way more dangerous and aggressive and violent too and even worse..they’ll be way more impossible to control because they aren’t animals that can be domesticated. Good luck to any dingbat that chooses to ignore these facts and is fine with risking possible criminal charges being filed against them or get sued for everything they have in their bank account.

    • @HOLLASOUNDS
      @HOLLASOUNDS Год назад

      They look cute until they rip your face off.

    • @HOLLASOUNDS
      @HOLLASOUNDS Год назад

      Actually the average Male Chimpanzee is only two times the strength of a healthy relatively well built Male human. The difference is the Chimps are fast and have a big mouth with huge teeth and can literally bite a humans hand clean off or bite the head straight into the skin with no hair to deflect or absorb the impact of the teeth, and are skin lacks the thickness and density of Chimps. This all leads to a human being ripped to bits in a few minutes going head to head with a Chimp.

  • @moisuomi
    @moisuomi 2 года назад

    Chimpanzees are WAY more conservative than Bonobos or ESPECIALLY humans.

  • @jamontoast1414
    @jamontoast1414 2 года назад

    20:40

  • @monkeybro819
    @monkeybro819 2 года назад

    excellent video. only japanese can be so honest, as about the movie, we can see more reality about chimps, both and humans. it shows true need of these humans to make society more comforatable for all, and using comunication, rather than taking things by force. sharing is so much important. we get more as a group, and at the end, as individuals.

    • @HOLLASOUNDS
      @HOLLASOUNDS Год назад

      There are to many humans, Chimps set to go extinct by 2055.

  • @kyleswanson9572
    @kyleswanson9572 2 года назад

    Hi!

  • @dbstrikerz
    @dbstrikerz 2 года назад

    Now I understand how dumb they truly are. I used to always think they were smart they are nasty

  • @beautifulbutterfly3939
    @beautifulbutterfly3939 2 года назад

    I wish all men would take out their sexual frustrations out on limbs ,and branches of trees 🌳 and throw leaves 🍃 in the air... This way the women can take a break from taking care of 4 to 5 kids, house 🏠 work, laundry, food shopping and cooking dinner. 😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @สมโภชน์ศรีโกสามาตร

    Enjoyable. Prof Sugiyama dared to be different. I was not sure about his meaning on “cultural toys”. It was good to know that the Rockefeller Foundation had some influences on Japanese primatology. Met him at IPS Congress in Bangalore in 1979 and remembered that he thought I was a Japanese but I was a Thai. His interests in human behavior in other animals reminded me about Prof Ito from Nagoya who I met in India before his retirement to Okinawa. Both were nice as human beings. Sompoad Srikosamatara from Thailand