6 résultats pour "bonobo"
- bonobo (faune & Flore).
-
Chimpanzee - biology.
separate occasions in Central Africa, probably beginning in the 1940s or 1950s. Chimpanzees infected with the original retrovirus or with HIV do not develop AIDS,however. Scientific classification: Chimpanzees belong to the Primate order. Some scientists classify chimpanzees in the family Pongidae and other scientists place chimpanzees in the family Hominidae. They make up the genus Pan. The common chimpanzee is classified as Pan troglodytes. The bonobo is classified as Pan paniscus. Micr...
-
chimpanzé (faune & Flore).
Sur leur vaste aire de répartition, les chimpanzés ne se rencontrent le plus souvent que sous la forme de petites populations isolées les unes des autres dans des îlotsforestiers. Par ailleurs, les effectifs de ces populations ont fortement diminué depuis quelques dizaines d’années, et l’espèce a totalement disparu de plusieurs pays (Gambie,Burkina, Bénin et Togo). 7 ÉLÉMENTS DE CLASSIFICATION Le chimpanzé appartient à la famille des hominidés de l’ordre des primates. Il forme, avec le bonobo,...
-
Ape - biology.
previous infant has been weaned. This process—like all aspects of ape development—takes a remarkable length of time. A gibbon is weaned by the age of about 2years, while chimps take more than 4 years. Like young monkeys, young apes are carried by their mothers. They either cling to the mother's belly or, in the case ofolder chimps, ride on her back. In great apes, infant care is largely the job of the females, while in some gibbons the mother hands over responsibility to the fatherwhen the infan...
-
Svt bonobo
D o c. 2 : Pollinisation des Orchidées + doc2 p104-105 2a . An gra ec u m se s q uipe da l e D e n o mbr e use s e s p è c es d ' or c hi d ées p o s s èden t des po l l in i e s , p e t i t e s ma ss e s c oll a n t e s c on t ena n t le s grain s d e p o l l en , e t de s tubes c yli n d r i q ues ( ne c t ai r es ) q u i s é c rèt en t un ne ct ar s u c ré . De s papi l l o ns v ien n ent b o i r e l e nect ar...
- hominidés (faune & Flore).