-
With visas denied, Senegal World Cup fans watch from afar
-
Crystal Palace appoint Sage as manager
-
Trump says Strait of Hormuz will be 'completely open' Friday
-
Brazil's Splitter to become new NBA Bulls coach: reports
-
Greed or player health? 'Damaging' World Cup drinks breaks under spotlight
-
Murdochs' Fox to acquire US streaming giant Roku
-
Argentine mining threatens scarce water resources in the Andes
-
Abdullah Ibrahim, world-renowned South African jazz pianist
-
Deschamps points to Spain as team to beat at World Cup
-
Tunisian football bosses mull firing Lamouchi after World Cup thrashing
-
Timeline of Trump-linked resort project in Albania
-
Relegated Wolves appoint Peixoto as new manager
-
New Zealand need collective effort to replace Williamson: Ravindra
-
IMF chief warns energy recovery to take time after US-Iran ceasefire
-
Lebanese mourn destroyed homes, livelihoods in southern city
-
Amazonian tribal leader Raoni hospitalized in intensive care
-
Trump faces G7 as questions swirl on Iran accord
-
England to give debuts to Cox and Baker against New Zealand
-
France shuts down dozen Israeli stands at defence trade show
-
Launch 3 Telecom Secures New Lakeland Facility
-
England coach McCullum 'worried' about Stokes after curfew incident
-
Sevilla's Mir sentenced to 8.5 years in prison for sexual assault
-
'They want to destroy us': Shock and anger as Russian attack sets Kyiv cathedral ablaze
-
'Start your engines'? Shipping groups wary on Hormuz reopening
-
Oil plunges, stocks jump on US-Iran peace deal
-
WHO, Lula urge G7 action on finishing pandemic treaty
-
US-Iran deal met with hope, scepticism in Mideast
-
Trump threatens 100% tariff on French wines over digital tax
-
German working-age population to shrink dramatically: study
-
MSF warns of 'dangerous gaps' in Ebola response in DR Congo
-
Three things we learned from the Barcelona Grand Prix
-
Real Madrid confirm Cucurella signing from Chelsea
-
At least 2,300 killed this year in Haiti gang violence: UN
-
G7 allies seek common ground with Trump after Iran accord
-
Hope for peace with North, but not unification at S. Korea festival
-
Iran take center stage at World Cup as Spain make bow
-
Kyrgyzstan bets on reality TV to tackle obesity crisis
-
Burnt-out Indonesians beat the blues with children's games
-
Greek fishermen struggle to keep up with pufferfish invaders
-
Blood sport at the White House for Trump's 80th birthday
-
Broeders-Bol backed by coach to challenge the very best over 800m
-
Sweden demolish Tunisia 5-1 to seize control of World Cup group
-
'For sure': Macron to preach stronger Europe vision at G7 swansong
-
France hosts G7 dominated by Trump, Iran
-
Carolina beat Vegas to end 20-year wait for second Stanley Cup
-
Middle East war: peace deal reactions
-
Crude prices plunge, stocks surge on US-Iran peace deal
-
Deadly strikes on Ukraine leave Kyiv cathedral in flames
-
Driven O'Brien looks to bring up ton at Ascot to ring in 30 years of glory
-
First major bump but prodigy Seixas still headed for the top
Senegal's spear-wielding savannah chimps yield clues on humanity's past
A shriek broke the dawn on the savannah, followed by more screeches and the rustle of branches: The wild Fongoli chimps were bidding each other good morning in the dry, scraggly Sahel.
The rare chimpanzees -- who live in the bush of hot, southeast Senegal rather than the forest as is more common -- exist on the extreme edge of what is possible for their species.
Their unusual way of living offers clues into humans' own evolutionary past, while their adaptations to the heat appear timely in a world where temperatures are on the rise.
Soaking in pools, cooling off in caves and even wielding spears: The 35 wild chimps of the Fongoli community have adapted to the environment with behaviours that defy their species' conventional norms.
Now, 25 years after starting her pioneering research on savannah chimps, which had never before been habituated to observers, primatologist Jill Pruetz has a wealth of data.
The study's longevity allows for a deeper dive into the Fongoli community's behaviours, relationships and how they learn from one generation to the next.
"Until they were habituated to observers so we could follow them around and take data, we only knew chimpanzees from forested areas," Pruetz told AFP reporters, who spent two days following her and her team as they tracked the primates in the bush.
The Fongoli chimps, who live on a 100-square-kilometre (40-square-mile) home range, are only one group of savannah chimps in the region but for years the only one to be studied.
On a recent morning, A.J., Raffy, Diouf and ambitious young Pistache sat at the top of a baobab, plucking a breakfast of fruit that they cracked open with a whack-whack-whack against the branches.
Screeching, or "pant-hooting" as their vocalisations are known, they communicated with other members nearby.
Pruetz and her team of Senegalese researchers follow the group's adult males, which currently number 10, choosing one each day to track from dawn to dusk. The females, however, are not followed in order to keep them more wary of poachers.
The males' strict hierarchy spans from Cy, the alpha, down to Siberut, the oldest and lowest ranking despite his superb hunting skills.
Since the social apes spend much of their time together, Pruetz is still able to observe the females and their young.
It is the females who have proven the most groundbreaking members of the clan: They are the only non-human animal to systematically use tools to hunt.
It is a behaviour Pruetz and her researchers have observed almost 600 times.
- 'Hottest area' -
After whittling sticks into spears, usually with their teeth, the females hunt bush babies during the rainy season, impaling the small primates as they shelter in tree holes.
With the heat index reaching 49 degrees Celsius (120 degrees Fahrenheit) in the hot season, life on the savannah can be gruelling.
The Fongoli chimps "have to deal with the hottest area that we've studied chimps in" Pruetz said, and must "minimise energy expenditure" during the dry season.
They are the only wild chimps in the world known to soak, taking dips in natural pools. They additionally "use caves to rest in, because the caves are cooler", Pruetz told AFP.
The savannah woodlands that are the Fongoli chimps' habitat are similar to those that human ancestors lived in some six or seven million years ago.
By looking at chimps, which along with bonobos are humans' closest living relatives, perhaps we "can help confirm some of the hypotheses about how those really early hominins, or bipedal apes, behaved", Pruetz said.
While the Fongoli chimps' many adaptations mean they are able to deal with "high heat stress", Pruetz said, "we're not sure that with climate change they can continue to do that".
- Gold rush -
The Fongoli apes are members of the critically endangered subspecies of West African chimpanzees.
While they have traditionally co-existed alongside humans on their home range, a new threat has emerged: a gold rush which has ushered an increase in both artisanal and industrial mines.
In the morning, the rumble of rock-grinding machines, which crush through buckets of substrate, could be heard before the savannah's fauna began its daily chorus.
Fires burned at artisanal mine sites, where night guards watched over equipment.
Mines can mean water pollution, greater resource extraction and the spread of human disease to chimps.
Papa Ibnou Ndiaye, a wildlife researcher and professor at Cheikh Anta Diop University in Dakar, said studying the Fongoli chimpanzees allows "the local administration to have accurate information to make informed decisions for the conservation of Senegal's biodiversity".
Pruetz spends part of the year teaching at Texas State University, while her four research assistants and project manager, who are originally from nearby villages, continue to track the apes.
They keep count as Raffy whacks a baobab fruit eight times or note which arm he uses to do so -- although chimps are normally left-handed.
But they also meticulously track the chimps' friendships and social plights.
"When someone gets home from being out with the chimps all day, you sit around the supper table and you talk about, what drama? What did Cy do today? What did Pistache do today?" said Pruetz, who has images of three of the chimp group's deceased or disappeared members tattooed on her arm.
Chimpanzees can live up to 50 years in the wild and how their "relationships change" is just one of the many interests for Pruetz.
F.Wagner--VB