var arrayFacts = [
"<b>Ain't No Chimp:</b><br><br>Scientists did not formally identify bonobos until 1926. Until that point, they believed bonobos were a type of common chimp.<br><br>To this day, they are the least understood of great apes.",

"<b>Liquid Diet:</b><br><br>In the wild, bonobos rarely need to drink water. They can usually get all the liquid they need from fruits.",

"<b>Water Bonobos:</b><br><br>While chimps tend to be frightened of water, bonobos seem a bit braver.<br><br>They even fish for shrimp by dipping their hands into the water.",

"<b>They Keep it Local:</b><br><br>While the four subspecies of chimpanzee range from western to central Africa, the bonobo is only found in a small part of the Democratic Republic of Congo (formerly Zaire).",

"<b>Make Love Not War:</b><br><br>While chimpanzees are territorial and will fight or even kill trespassing chimps from another group, bonobos don't seem to have strict territories.<br><br>Rather than fighting physically, they handle tension through sexual behaviors, not aggression.",

"<b>Hairy Humans:</b><br><br>Bonobos look more similar to humans than common chimps!<br><br>They can walk upright more easily, and also have smooth hair that parts down the middle of their heads.",

"<b>Females First:</b><br><br>In the bonobo world, the females are the leaders.<br><br>They form strong bonds with each other and their sons, and their societies tend to be very peaceful.",

"<b>A Mother's Love:</b><br><br>Mother bonobos form strong, lifelong bonds with their sons. When daughters mature, they must leave their birth troop and join another one.<br><br>When a female produces offspring with a male from the new troop, she is accepted as a member.",

"<b>Hairy Humans (Part II):</b><br><br>Like human babies, bonobo offspring are born helpless and must be carried everywhere for the first two years of life.<br><br>For several years, youngsters stay close to their mothers as they grow physically and learn how to participate in adult society.<br><br>While bonobos become sexually mature at around 8 years of age, they rarely breed until they are 13.",

"<b>Hairy Humans (Part III):</b><br><br>Like human children, bonobo youngsters gain social skills and independence through play.<br><br>They enjoy games that are similar to 'King of the Mountain' or 'Blindman's Bluff,' taking turns chasing one another and playing leader or follower.",

"<b>Not Just For the Birds:</b><br><br>Bonobos build nests in trees-just like birds! Each evening, they build their nest beds out of twigs and leaves in the forks of trees.<br><br>They sleep in large groups so they can help one another keep a look out for predators.",

"<b>Hairy Humans (Part IV):</b><br><br>Some scientists believe that bonobos are more intelligent than chimpanzees.<br><br>Genetically, bonobos are considered humans' closest relatives. Like humans, they teach their young, use tools, work together for the good of a community, laugh, and play.",

"<b>Bonobos in Danger:</b><br><br>Bonobos are considered the most endangered of the great apes.<br><br>Because humans continue to encroach on bonobo habitat, hunt them, and sell their offspring as pets, their populations are dwindling. There are fewer than 10,000 bonobos alive in the wild today.",

"<b>Hairy Humans (Part V):</b><br><br>The bonobo shares more than 98 percent of their genes with humans.<br><br>They are as closely related to humans as foxes are to dogs.",

"<b>Hairy Humans (Part VI):</b><br><br>Humans are believed to have split from the chimpanzee and bonobo line of ancestry only 8 million years ago!",

"<b>Sensitive Souls:</b><br><br>During the bombing of Hellebrunn, Germany in World War II, bonobos in a local zoo died of fright.<br><br>The chimps in the zoo were unaffected by the noise."];