Year of the Gorilla Part 2: Mountain Gorilla

Posted by in Africa,Endangered Species,Featured,Gorilla

Mountain Gorillas:

Mountain Gorilla Rwanda. Photo courtesy of Terra Incognita Ecotours

Mountain Gorilla Rwanda. Photo courtesy of Terra Incognita Ecotours

Mountain gorillas are found only in Central Africa and only in two regions: 1) the Virunga Massif mountain range which includes the Volcanoes National Park in Rwanda (Parc National des Volcans), the Virunga National Park in the DRC (Parc National de Virunga) and the Mgahinga National Park in Uganda; and, 2) the Bwindi Impenetrable Forest National Park in Uganda.

There could be less than 750 individual Mountain Gorillas remaining in the wild today. For reference, one screening room at a large movie theatre can hold about 250-300 people. This means all the Mountain Gorillas left in the world today could fit into just three screenings for the new Harry Potter movie!

The Mountain Gorilla (Gorilla beringei beringei) belongs to the eastern gorilla species, which also includes the Eastern Lowland Gorilla (Gorilla beringei graueri). As we mentioned there are only two populations of Mountain Gorilla. 1) the Virunga Massif mountain range  and, 2) the Bwindi Impenetrable Forest National Park. The Bwindi Mountain Gorilla could be a third subspecies, Gorilla beringei bwindi but the taxonomic status of the populations is still as yet unclear.

The major threats affecting or having affected Mountain Gorilla populations are habitat loss or modification and forest encroachment, disease and disease transmission from humans and war or political unrest in the region.

Mountain Gorillas have faced increased pressures over the past 20+ years due to the civil unrest in the region including the Rwandan tragedy in the early 90′s which forced millions to flee the area resulting in increased pressure and utilization of natural resources (trees for wood, wildlife for food) just to survive.  Perfectly adapted to their mountain habitat, this population helped to bring “eco”-tourism to a now peaceful Rwanda and Uganda making it more valuable as a living natural resource than being sold as bushmeat in the marketplace.

The Houston Zoo is hosting Dr. Michael Cranfield, Executive Director of the Mountain Gorilla Veterinary Project as part of our Call of the Wild Lecture Series September 10th, 20009. Please go to http://www.houstonzoo.org/lectureseries/ for ticket information.

Tomorrow’s Blog: Western Lowland Gorilla’s

For more on Year of the Gorilla, go to http://www.yog2009.org/

*This is part 2 of 10 in our Mountain Gorilla Membership Madness giveaway. Post a comment on 3 mountain gorilla blogs before August 14 and enter to win a free Houston Zoo membership!

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