@@antoniocesardecarvalhovian5670 I think its to show how much humans have messed him up mentally. I think it makes koba more interesting since his kind is naturally peaceful
@@antoniocesardecarvalhovian5670 False. Koba is a representation of a Bonobo that goes against his nature due to gaining sapience and intellegence similar to humanity (much like the other apes) through the ALZ 113 and his incredibly dark backstory. If anything it shows how even a calm species can go completely dark/evil after being self aware of the bad things that happened to him and gaining the emotion of true hatred because of tampering with his brain functions with experimentation giving him the ability to hold those kinds of grudges the same way a human would. If you remember when Koba first appeared in Rise he was completely docile until he gained the ALZ 113 and started to recognize what happened to him. Especially in the Firestorm prequel novel when Jacobs starts to demean him as a simple animal and mocks his suffering several times. Remember the Apes in the modern Planet of the Apes trilogy are all going against their nature due to the ALZ 112/113 because they gained human like sapience and intelligence though still retain some of their instincts as regular apes.
For that one female, who was in captivity so long and then now is the matriarch, what an accomplishment for both human and bonobo. It makes my heart happy that she is happy and free.
its true but for how long that must go down to the credit of the locals however with this sensless war some unscruplous and despearte people are now going in to areas that were previousily out of reach there needs to be a education and a culture change that its unacceptable and they need protection
I love that she visits the wild ones she raised and released, calls to them to see how they are but doesn’t try to interact more in order to keep them wild.❤❤❤ So sweet
It was stunning to watch the adults. It's easy to feel like you are looking back in time, at proto-humans. Living history! If I were 30 years younger I'd be on the next plane over there to volunteer. I could love on those babies for the rest of my life. Now I have fibro and chronic fatigue, but at least I can enjoy them from the comfort of my bed. Thank you for filming this!
Check out Dr. Stuart McGill, he is the world's best low back pain expert so he rarely discusses fibromyalgia but has had some success stories rehabbing fibromyalgia patients. The key is to recode the nerve engrams. You can find a pdf of his book low back disorders online and he wrote a few paragraphs about it. Worth checking out imo.
It's sad that u guys in your country you hunted your bonobos to extinction, now you are lecturing us African how to keep wild animals that you don't have
The story behind this wonderful place is amazing and also heartbreaking. If you've never read about it, you'd never understand. These bonobos as well as other primates are so much like us, it's amazing.
I much prefer bonobos to regular chimpanzees. Bonobos were once called “pygmy chimpanzees”, but I’m glad the name was changed so that they may be better understood and protected.
@@looksirdroids9134 They can produce hybrid offspring together in captivity. Your comment is correct, but you make it seem like they’re more distinct than they are.
@@looksirdroids9134 They're not completely different species, they're related. Bonobos are just chimps that happened to live in an area with abundance of resources, so they grew peaceful instead of violent and psychotic like regular chimps
They have bonobos at the San Diego Zoo, which is an amazing place, BTW. All zoos should be like that one. The male banged on the grass to chase the people off who were watching while the females took a nap. Obviously a very intelligent animal.
The fact that the great apes like bonobos are so humanlike, cute and just such amazing animals are still hunted and babies ripped away from mothers absolutely breaks ny heart and makes me sooooo sad i could cry… i absolutely despise humans who partake in such evil behavior..
I loved how the guy at the begging said “unlike chimps and humans which are often violet and aggressive with each other” 😂😂 Sad and funny at the same damn time!
I like to think that when it comes to humans that dedicate their lives ro rescuing and rehabbing animals that...when they leave this world, they next stop is a very....very....special place.
@@southlondon86 Well, dunno yet. I suspect we don't know and aren't meant to know because if we did, we would be jumping off buildings and bridges to get there. The human body is an electrochemical system. Electricity is energy and energy never disappears. It only transforms. So, the way I see it is...when our bodies give out and can no longer support this electrochemical system, the energy leaves our body and goes to this "next form". What this form is....again, I'm not sure. But, even Peter Pan said...."To die would be a great adventure." I believe their is some truth to that. It will be an adventure.
Ever since I learned about bonobos and their er... loving culture and personalities when I was a child, they became my favorite animal, besides cats that is, and I have written fantasy stories based on them, as to how we and our world would be like if we humans would have been more like bonobos than like chimps.
Have you ever read on the subject of them? Besides the recently glorified over exaggerated in so many ways tales of their homosexual eroticí love lives. You know we're not like chimps. Were just as much not like bonobos as we are chimps most of those mannerisms from the ones at that reservation are human learned ones wild ones are much different
No. 4 million years ago is the era of Australopithecus Anamensis/Afarensis. They had a different skull structure and differently organized slightly larger brain already, they also were as fully bipedal as we are, just slightly differently. They also had evolved the "Baseball Pitcher's" shoulder that enables Humans to throw Baseball sized objects, especially rocks, very hard, probably the first Hominin projectile weapon capability. Thus, our ancestors were more dangerous than these Bonobos.
I remember watching Robert Sapolsky and he mentioned something along the lines that different animals have like different types of penises and sperm production and different strategies for ensuring their genes get passed on. Also females can have different ovulation strategies, cycles all that jazz. I am not 100% sure what is going on here with bonobos but something along those lines might be in effect.
I'VE NEVER HEARD OF BONOBOS EVER! THEY ARE FASCINATING AND SO CUTE. ❤. I'M GLAD THE LADY IS REPLENISHING THE FOREST WITH THE NEARLY EXTINCT BONOBOS. ONCE THEY ARE GONE, ONLY CLONING CAN SAVE THEM AND THAT'S NOT THE WAY TO REPLENISH A FOREST IN REALITY. 😢💔.
@@marymccluer1630 sounds like a great idea that can most definetily work but whos going to pay the locals first of all i mean i would donate .who will monitor the job being done properly a tourist aspect could help to see these creature as valuable to the world heritage i mean pandas are doing well why not bonobos rhino etc get armed protection giraffe protection needs to be funded local education and a changing of he mindset turn away from the use of bush meat public health measure ,reducyion change in local thinking' culture etc i mean there still there so something working after 100s of years goverment pressure on local goverment banning of logging also to protect their habitat
Ants form a queue. Ants, Termites, Honey Bees, Fish and Birds of the same species in migrations work together in a disciplined manner. Humans have had wars since time immemorial.
Thanks you for serving this cousins of of and please try as much to educate the locals about their well-being and how their present in that area can change their life from tourism or else they will be use as food again.
Lmao you are joking yes? "Or else they will be used as food again" 😅😅😅 AGAIN?? SO tell me when did this stop? Because I can tell you it never ever stopped. The congo and surrounding regions where the bonobos live has been at war and conflict for many years. Bonobos have been pursued relentlessly for their meat cakes bushmeat for many years and they are today there has never been stopped. In fact there is even a new footage video circulating right here in RU-vid of a poacher who just killed and caught 2 adult bonobos for bushmeat and he rips the baby off of one to inspect it then throws it back on its dead mother trying to nurse. The video is widely circulated on here and it's not hard to find just search bonobos being poached if you don't believe it. But stop speaking lies. Acting like this is not happening anymore is a illusion.
Ok. But, it’s because of our differences, humans don’t view sex in the same way. It’s a much more emotional thing for humans. So, more sex wouldn’t fix this.
The more "emotional" thing is probably due to our competitive nature. What you think is some beautiful bonding is really just our evolution of a woman finding a strong male, and a strong male feeling reassured with a fertile, submissive female. You translate this as some beautiful romantic thing, but I am sure other competitive species feel something similar. Perhaps it's better to not feel those emotions at all.