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Tuesday, May 17, 2005
Experts say peer pressure is a major reason people take up
smoking. Charlie, a chimp at the Bloemfontein Zoo in South
Africa, may be another victim.
"When he sees people smoking outside his enclosure, he begs
for a cigarette," Daryl Barnes, the zoo's senior nature
conservator, explained in an e-mail. After a visitor tosses
one his way, he "has a few puffs" while sitting on the grass
or a stump.
In his 15 years at the zoo, Barnes has seen Charlie smoke
about five times. But this may be only because Charlie is
sneaky. When caught by zookeepers, Charlie throws the
cigarette down, "grins at us, bobs his head and tries to
lure us away from the cigarette on the ground," Barnes said.
The zoo thinks that the habit started back when Charlie was
part of a Dallas-based circus.
So far, "no signs of addiction, or withdrawal, have ever
been noticed," said Barnes. But "we are looking at a series
of measures to prevent the public from throwing food or
cigarettes into his enclosure."
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