Use of Human Languages By Captive Great Apes
By Duane Rumbaugh, Sue Savage-Rumbaugh and William
Fields
World Atlas of Great Apes and Their Conservation
(UNEP World Conservation Monitoring
Centre, University of California Press; 2005)
Some
believe that the extinction of nonhuman great apes is preferable to preserving
them forever in captivity, on the grounds that their nobility is diminished in
artificial habitats. Others hold that great apes in captivity can lead happy
lives, that the value of the preserved genetic material will prove to be very
great, and that the human psyche would be significantly damaged by the loss of
these species. This view embraces preservation strategies that create a diversity
of niches for great apes that include the wild, zoos, reserves, refuges, sanctuaries,
and even laboratories.
Chimpanzees and bonobos have lived in a captive research facility at Georgia
State University in the USA since 1971, most notably sponsored by the work of
Duane Rumbaugh and Sue Savage-Rumbaugh. This research has explored the mental
abilities and cognitive character of great apes, in the process significantly
changing our view of Pan and how these nonhumans might exist in human-modified
landscapes. Two methods have been used to teach human languages to great apes:
one uses sign language; the other, explored here, uses graphical symbols that
represent words (lexigrams). The following is a brief account of the research
initiatives of the Rumbaughs, the great apes that have participated in the research
at the Language Research Center of Georgia State University, and the future plans
for their lives in coexistence with humans.
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