Posts Tagged ‘Gorilla’

Year of the Gorilla Part 3: Western Lowland Gorilla

Posted by in Africa,Endangered Species,Gorilla

Western Lowland Gorilla

This population occurs within the countries of Cameroon, Central African Republic, Gabon, Republic of Congo, and Equatorial Guinea. The largest of the gorilla populations, with approximately 150,000 individuals across Central Africa, gained a large boost in known numbers when researchers from the Wildlife Conservation Society discovered an unknown (to researchers) population in 2006/2007 in the Republic of Congo which in effect doubled their numbers in the wild from previous estimates. For more information you can link to: http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/africa/08/05/congo.gorillas/index.html

The Western Lowland Gorilla is listed as Critically Endangered even though they occur over a wide area with relatively low human population densities. The fragmented subpopulations generally occur at low numbers and their distribution is patchy with an estimated 80% of the population live outside protected area.

Western Lowland Gorilla photo courtesy Thomas Breuer

Western Lowland Gorilla photo courtesy Thomas Breuer

Currently the major threats to this population are poaching and disease epidemics such as the Ebola Virus followed by future habitat loss. Outbreaks of the Ebola virus alone since 2000 has claimed thousands of great apes in Africa.

Because gorillas have a low reproductive rate, they are very susceptible to even low level of hunting which can easily fragment a family unit’s social structure. Reproductive groups of Western Gorillas almost always contain only one dominant silverback male plus three or four females and four or five offspring (Fay, 1989). Adult females in any group are mostly unrelated, and the social ties that exist between them are weak. In contrast to many other primates, it is the bond between each individual female and the silverback, rather than bonds between the females, that hold the group together. Upon reaching maturity, both males and females leave the natal group. The females usually join another group or a lone young adult male, whereas the males remain solitary until they can attract females and establish their own groups (www.YOG2009.org).

We have mentioned Eastern Lowland Gorillas and Western Lowland Gorillas and the two populations are separated geographically by over 600 miles and have a few distinguishable physical differences.

The Houston Zoo is proud to support the Mbeli Bai Gorilla Study in Nouabalé-Ndoki National Park, Republic of Congo. More on this in a later blog but for now you may go to http://www.houstonzoo.org/gorilla-study/ for more information and to watch a short video from the site.

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: Cross River Gorilla – the world’s most endangered great ape.

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!

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!

Year of the Gorilla Part 1

Posted by in Africa,Endangered Species,Gorilla

Mountain Gorilla - Rwanda. Photo courtesy of www.ecotours.com

Mountain Gorilla - Rwanda. Photo courtesy of www.ecotours.com

Zoos and Aquariums have proclaimed 2009 to be the Year of the Gorilla so we thought we would give you 10 days of Gorilla Blogs and focus a bit of time on the largest of the Great Apes.

Some gorilla populations are the object of concerted conservation and restoration efforts. However, gorillas as a whole remain endangered and continue to face severe threats. All the great ape species of Africa – the bonobos, chimpanzees and gorillas, and the orangutans of Southeast Asia, are in steep decline, and the rate of loss is increasing virtually everywhere.

The Statistics: There are four recognized subspecies of Gorilla which fall into two species (scientific names in italics):

The Western Lowland Gorilla species Gorilla gorilla or is separated into two subspecies

-Western Lowland Gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) contains between 125,000 and 200,000 individuals remaining in the wild

-Cross River Gorilla (Gorilla gorilla diehli) only 250-300 individuals remain

The Eastern Lowland Gorilla species Gorilla beringei is made up of

-Eastern Lowland Gorilla (Gorilla beringei) may be as low as 5,000 individuals, down from 17,000 in 1995. This population is difficult to monitor due to political instability in their range countries

-Mountain Gorilla (Gorilla beringei beringei) 700-740 individuals remaining

The Houston Zoo will be 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. Seating is limited for this special event.

*This is part 1 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!

Mbeli Bai Gorilla Study

Posted by in Africa,Endangered Species,Featured

 

Western Lowland Gorilla. Photo courtesy of Thomas Breuer

Western Lowland Gorilla. Photo courtesy of Thomas Breuer

Africa has a mystique. It is awe-inspiring, a living place yet dark and formidable. We can never know Africa. It is full of cultures and heritage, wildlife and wild places.

But, Deepest Darkest Africa is in danger. There is a Congolese proverb which says you do not teach the paths of the forest to an old gorilla. But what if those paths are gone forever? How will the gorilla find its way? And worse, what if the old gorillas have gone away, lost to humans? Who will show the young the paths of the forest?

There is a deeper meaning in all of this as the path leads through the dark impenetrable jungles to clearings in the trees, called Bai’s. These swampy clearings are an oasis in the forest, offering food, water, minerals and a place for wildlife to interact. Gorillas and elephants have been travelling to these bai’s for decades, possibly centuries, shown the way through the forest by past generations.

 

In the Republic of Congo, the Houston Zoo is working with the Mbeli Bai Gorilla Program in the Nouabalé-Ndoki National Park. Mbeli Bai is the only long-term demographic study on western gorillas which uses direct observations to provide important baseline information on the social organization, demography and behavior of an intact population of gorillas. Detailed studies are also undertaken on the activity of other large mammal species using the bai, such as forest elephants, sitatungas, forest buffaloes as well as otters and many other species.

 

At Mbeli Bai more than 350 gorillas have been monitored since 1995. The results of the monitoring of individual identifiable animals at Mbeli Bai has provided major and unique insights into the social organization and behavior of this elusive species and has reported many spectacular behavioral observations such as twin births, silverback splash displays, and the first observation of tool use in free-ranging gorillas; findings that have attracted significant international media attention.

 

Often quoted, 200 years ago, Thomas Jefferson wrote for if one link in nature’s chain might be lost, another might be lost, until the whole of things will vanish by piecemeal. What he noted then holds true for environments across the world today. If we have the opportunity to protect and hold dear this chain; wildlife, habitat and human communities, then we must take that opportunity and act while the old gorilla can still teach the young, his forest path.

 

For more information, please go to: http://www.houstonzoo.org/gorilla-study/

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