Difference between revisions of "Gorilla" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{Taxobox_genus_entry | taxon = '''''Gorilla'''''}}<br>{{Taxobox_authority | author = [[Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire|I Geoffroy]] | date = [[1853]]}}
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{{Taxobox_genus_entry | taxon = '''''Gorilla'''''}}<br/>{{Taxobox_authority | author = [[Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire|I Geoffroy]] | date = 1853}}
 
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{{Taxobox_section_type_species | color = pink | species = [[Western Gorilla|Troglodytes gorilla]] | comment = Savage, 1847}}
 
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The '''gorilla''', the largest of the living [[primate]]s, is a ground-dwelling [[herbivore]] that inhabits the [[forest]]s of [[Africa]]. Gorillas are divided into two species and (under debate as of [[2006]]) either four or five subspecies. With 92-98%{{citeneeded}} of its [[DNA]] being identical to that of a human, it is the second closest living relative to [[human]]s after the two [[chimpanzee]] species.  
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The '''gorilla''', the largest of the living [[primate]]s is a ground-dwelling [[herbivore]] that inhabits limited regions of [[forest]] in central [[Africa]]. The gorilla occurs in two species, the western gorilla and the eastern gorilla. Both species are endangered due to poaching, loss of habitat, and death caused by the [[ebola]] virus. Gorilla DNA is 98 percent identical to that of humans, making them the second closest living relative to [[human]]s, after the two chimpanzee species (Chen 2001).  
  
==Name==
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Gorillas are [[ape]]s in the superfamily Hominoidea and the family [[Hominidae]] known also as the "great apes" and comprising [[human]]s,<ref>The issue of where to place humans [[taxon]]omically has been contentious in the past with many people not feeling comfortable to be categorized as an ape. At the level of academic biologists, however, the issue is settled. The fundamental issue is not about biology but about the presumption by many that a distinctive human spirit, thought process, and behavior set humans apart from the gorillas and chimpanzees. Shifting the academic foundations in relation to these presumptions would be prerequisite to resolving the categorization issue.</ref> the gorillas, [[chimpanzee]]s, and [[orangutan]]s. All other apes belong to the family Hylobatidae and are known as the "lesser apes" ([[gibbon]]s).  
The American physician and missionary [[Thomas Staughton Savage]] first described the [[Western Gorilla]] (he called it ''[[Troglodytes gorilla]]'') in 1847 from specimens obtained in [[Liberia]]. The name derived from the [[Gorillai]], a "tribe of hairy women", described by [[Hanno the Navigator]], a Carthaginian navigator and possible visitor (circa [[480 B.C.E.]]) to the area that later became [[Sierra Leone]].<ref>{{cite book | author = Müller, C. | title = Geographici Graeci Minores | year = 1855-61 | pages = 1.1-14: text and trans. Ed, J. Blomqvist (1979)}}</ref>
 
  
 
== Physical characteristics ==
 
== Physical characteristics ==
[[image:Gorilla-hand.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Hand of a Gorilla at San Diego Zoo]]Gorillas move around by [[knuckle-walking]].  Adult males range in height from 165-175 cm (5 ft 5 in-5 ft 9 in), and in weight from 140-165 kg (310-365 lb). Females are about half the weight of males. Gorillas have a facial structure which is described as [[Prognathism#Mandibular_prognathism|prognathous]], that is, their [[mandible]] protrudes further out than the [[maxilla]].
 
  
[[Gestation]] is months. There are typically 3 to 4 years between births. Infants stay with their mothers for 3-4 years. Females mature at 10&ndash;12 years (earlier in captivity); males 11&ndash;13 years. Lifespan is between 30&ndash;50 years. The [[Philadelphia Zoo]]'s [[Massa (gorilla)|Massa]] set the longevity record of 54 years at the time of his death.  
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Gorillas move around by knuckle-walking. Adult males range in height from 165 to 175 centimeters (5 feet 5 inches to 5 feet 9 inches), and in weight from 140 to 165 kilograms (310 to 365 pounds). Females are about half the weight of males. Gorillas' facial structure is described as prognathous; that is, their mandible, or lower jaw, protrudes further out than the maxilla, upper jaw.
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Gestation (the carrying of the [[embryo]] or fetus inside the female prior to birth) is eight and a half months. Infants stay with their mothers for three to four years, and females typically do not have more offspring during that time. Females mature when they are 10 to 12 years old (earlier in captivity); males mature between the ages of 11 and 13. Gorillas live to be 30 to 50 years old. The oldest gorilla on record is the Philadelphia Zoo's Massa, who lived to be 54.  
  
Gorillas are mainly [[Herbivore|vegetarian]], eating fruits, leaves, and shoots. Insects make up 1-2% of their diet. Due to their diet of plant life, gorillas often have bloated stomachs.
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Gorillas are mainly vegetarian, eating [[fruit]]s, [[leaf|leaves]], and shoots, but they also eat [[insect]]s. Due to their diet of [[plant]] life, gorillas often have bloated stomachs.
  
Almost all gorillas share the same [[blood type]], B; and as seen in the photo above, like humans, have individual finger prints.
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Almost all gorillas share the same [[blood]] type, B, and have individual fingerprints, like humans.
  
 
==Classification==
 
==Classification==
Until recently there were considered to be three species of gorilla, The Western Lowland, The Eastern Lowland and Mountain Gorilla. There is now agreement that the gorilla is divided into two species of at least two subspecies each. More recently it has been claimed that a third subspecies exists in one of these groups.  
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Scientists for decades divided gorillas into three species: the Western Lowland Gorilla, the Eastern Lowland Gorilla, and the Mountain Gorilla. [[Primate|Primatologists]] now generally divide gorillas into two species, the Western Gorilla ''(Gorilla gorilla)'' and the Eastern Gorilla ''(Gorilla Beringei)'', with at least two subspecies for each. A third subspecies for one of the Eastern Gorilla is also claimed.  
  
 
[[image:bristol.zoo.western.lowland.gorilla.arp.jpg|thumb|right|250px|[[Western lowland gorilla]]]]
 
[[image:bristol.zoo.western.lowland.gorilla.arp.jpg|thumb|right|250px|[[Western lowland gorilla]]]]
  
[[image:Sleepygirlgorilla.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Female Gorilla at NC Zoo]]
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Primatologists continue to explore the relationships between various gorilla populations (Groves 2002). The species and subspecies listed below are the ones most scientists agree upon (Groves 2005).
  
[[Primatology|Primatologists]] continue to explore the relationships between various gorilla populations.<ref name=Groves2002>{{cite journal | first = Colin | last = Groves | authorlink = Colin Groves | year = 2002 | url = http://arts.anu.edu.au/grovco/Gorilla%20Biology.pdf | title = A history of gorilla taxonomy | journal = Gorilla Biology: A Multidisciplinary Perspective</i>, Andrea B. Taylor & Michele L. Goldsmith (editors) | publisher = Cambridge University Press | pages = pp. 15–34}}</ref> The species and subspecies listed here are the ones most scientists agree upon.<ref name=MSW3/>
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* '''Genus ''Gorilla''
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** [[Western Gorilla]] ''(Gorilla gorilla)''
 +
*** [[Western Lowland Gorilla]] ''(Gorilla gorilla gorilla)''
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*** [[Cross River Gorilla]] ''(Gorilla gorilla diehli)''
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** [[Eastern Gorilla]] ''(Gorilla beringei)''
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*** [[Mountain Gorilla]] ''(Gorilla beringei beringei)''
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*** [[Eastern Lowland Gorilla]] ''(Gorilla beringei graueri)''
  
* '''Genus ''Gorilla'' '''<ref name=MSW3/>
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The proposed third subspecies of the Eastern Gorilla, ''Gorilla beringei'', which has not received a full Latin designation, is the Bwindi population of the Mountain Gorilla, sometimes called Bwindi Gorilla.
** [[Western Gorilla]] (''Gorilla gorilla'')
 
*** [[Western Lowland Gorilla]] (''Gorilla gorilla gorilla'')
 
*** [[Cross River Gorilla]] (''Gorilla gorilla diehli'')
 
** [[Eastern Gorilla]] (''Gorilla beringei'')
 
*** [[Mountain Gorilla]] (''Gorilla beringei beringei'')
 
*** [[Eastern Lowland Gorilla]] (''Gorilla beringei graueri'')
 
  
The proposed third subspecies of ''Gorilla beringei'', which has not yet received a full latin designation, is the [[Mountain Gorilla (Bwindi population) |Bwindi population]] of the Mountain Gorilla, sometimes called Bwindi Gorilla.
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==Name==
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The American physician and missionary Thomas Staughton Savage first described the [[Western Gorilla]] (he called it ''Troglodytes gorilla'') in 1847 from specimens obtained in [[Liberia]]. The name derived from the Gorillai, a "tribe of hairy women," described by Hanno the Navigator, a Carthaginian navigator and possible visitor (circa 480 <small>B.C.E.</small>) to the area that later became [[Sierra Leone]] (Müller 1979).  
  
 
==Endangerment==
 
==Endangerment==
Both species of gorilla are [[endangered species|endangered]], and have been subject to intense [[poaching]] for a long time. Threats to gorilla survival include [[habitat destruction]] and the [[bushmeat]] trade. In 2004 a population of several hundred gorillas in the [[Odzala National Park]], [[Republic of Congo]] was essentially wiped out by the [[Ebola virus]].<ref>{{cite web | title = Gorillas infecting each other with Ebola | url = http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn9517-gorillas-infecting-each-other-with-ebola.html | accessdate = 2006-07-10 | date = [[2006-07-10]] | work = NewScientist.com}}</ref>
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Both species of gorilla are [[endangered species|endangered]], and have been subject to intense poaching. Threats to gorilla survival include habitat destruction and the bushmeat trade. A population of several hundred gorillas in the Odzala National Park, [[Republic of Congo]] was essentially wiped out in 2004 by the [[Ebola virus]] (Caillaud 2006).
  
 
== Behavior ==
 
== Behavior ==
 
[[Image:Male silverback Gorilla.JPG|right|thumbnail|250px|A silverback gorilla]]
 
[[Image:Male silverback Gorilla.JPG|right|thumbnail|250px|A silverback gorilla]]
  
A '''silverback''' is an adult male gorilla, typically more than 12 years of age and named for the distinctive patch of silver hair on his back. A silverback gorilla has large canines that come with maturity. Blackbacks are sexually mature males of up to 11 years of age.
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A '''silverback''' is an adult male gorilla, typically more than 12 years old and named for the distinctive patch of silver hair on his back. Silverbacks have large canines that come with maturity. Blackbacks are sexually mature males of up to 11 years of age.
  
Silverbacks are the strong, dominant troop leaders. Each typically leads a troop of 5 to 30 gorillas and is the center of the troop's attention, making all the decisions, mediating conflicts, determining the movements of the group, leading the others to feeding sites and taking responsibility for the safety and well-being of the troop.
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Silverbacks are the strong, dominant troop leaders. Each typically leads a troop of five to 30 gorillas and is the center of the troop's attention, making all the decisions, mediating conflicts, determining the movements of the group, leading the others to feeding sites, and taking responsibility for the safety and well-being of the troop.
 
[[Image:gorilla-kiktajm.png|thumb|left|Gorilla at the Cincinnati Zoo]]
 
[[Image:gorilla-kiktajm.png|thumb|left|Gorilla at the Cincinnati Zoo]]
Males will slowly begin to leave their original troop when they are about 11 years old, travelling alone or with a group of other males for 2&ndash;5 years before being able to attract females to form a new group and start breeding. While infant gorillas normally stay with their mother for 3&ndash;4 years, silverbacks will care for weaned young orphans, though never to the extent of carrying the little gorillas.
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Males slowly begin to leave their original troop when they are about 11 years old, traveling alone or with a group of other males for two to five years before they attract females to form a new group and start breeding. While infant gorillas normally stay with their mother for three to four years, silverbacks will care for weaned young orphans, though never to the extent of carrying the little gorillas.
  
If challenged by a younger or even by an outsider male, a silverback will scream, beat his chest, break branches, bare his teeth, then charge forward. Sometimes a younger male in the group can take over leadership from an old male. If the leader is killed by disease, accident, fighting or poachers, the group will split up, as animals disperse to look for a new protective male. Very occasionally, a group might be taken over in its entirety by another male. There is a strong risk that the new male may kill the infants of the dead silverback.
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If challenged by a younger male or even by an outsider male, a silverback will scream, beat his chest, break branches, bare his teeth, then charge forward. Sometimes a younger male in the group can take over leadership from an old male. If the leader is killed by [[disease]], accident, fighting, or poachers, the group will split up and individuals will look for a new protective male. Though extremely rare, a group might be taken over in its entirety by another male. In this case, the new leader may kill the infants of the dead silverback.
  
 
==Studies==
 
==Studies==
* 19th Century: The first study of gorillas was in 1867. The [[France|French]] researcher heading the project read legends about gorillas, then wrote tall tales. He portrayed them as dangerous animals that would raid villages and rape women.
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* ''Nineteenth century.'' The first known study of gorillas was in 1867. The [[France|French]] researcher heading the project read legends about gorillas, then wrote tall tales. He portrayed them as dangerous animals that would raid villages and rape women.
  
* Early 20th Century: The next systematic study was not conducted until the 1920s, when [[Carl Akely]] of the [[American Museum of Natural History]] traveled to Africa to hunt for an animal to be shot and stuffed. On his first trip he was accompanied by his friends [[Mary Bradley]], a famous mystery writer, and her husband. After their trip, Mary Bradley wrote ''[[On the Gorilla Trail]]''. She later became an advocate for the conservation of gorillas and wrote several more books (mainly for children). In the late 1920s and early 1930s, [[Robert Yerkes]] and his wife Ava helped further the study of gorillas when they sent [[Harold Bigham]] to Africa. Yerkes also wrote a book in 1929 about the great apes.  
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* ''Early twentieth century.'' The next known systematic study was not conducted until the 1920s, when Carl Akely of the [[American Museum of Natural History]] traveled to [[Africa]] to hunt for an animal to be shot and stuffed. On his first trip, he was accompanied by two friends, Mary Bradley, a famous mystery writer, and her husband. After their trip, Mary Bradley wrote ''On the Gorilla Trail.'' She later became an advocate for the conservation of gorillas and wrote several more books, mostly children’s books. In the late 1920s and early 1930s, [[Robert Yerkes]] and his wife Ava helped further the study of gorillas when they sent Harold Bigham to Africa. Yerkes also wrote a book in 1929 about the great apes.  
           
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* Mid 20th Century:  After WWII, [[George Schaller]] was one of the first researchers to go into the field and study primates. In 1959, he conducted a systematic study of the Mountain Gorilla in the wild and published his work. Years later, at the behest of [[Louis Leakey]] and the ''[[National Geographic]]'', [[Dian Fossey]] conducted a much longer and more comprehensive study of the Mountain Gorilla. It was not until she published her work that many misconceptions and myths about gorillas were finally disproved, including the myth that gorillas are violent.
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* ''Mid-twentieth century.'' After [[World War II]], George Schaller was one of the first researchers to go into the field and study [[primate]]s. In 1959, he conducted a systematic study of the Mountain Gorilla in the wild and published his work. Years later, at the behest of [[Louis Leakey]], [[Dian Fossey]] conducted a much longer and more comprehensive study of the Mountain Gorilla. It was not until she published her work that many misconceptions and myths about gorillas were finally disproved, including the myth that gorillas are violent.
  
 
== Intelligence ==
 
== Intelligence ==
Gorillas are closely related to humans and are considered highly intelligent. A few individuals in captivity, such as [[Koko (gorilla)|Koko]], have been taught a subset of [[sign language]] (see [[animal language]] for a discussion).
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Gorillas are closely related to humans and are considered to be highly intelligent. A few individuals in captivity, such as Koko, have been taught a subset of sign language.
 
   
 
   
=== Natural tool use by all the "great apes" ===
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[[Image:Gorrila tool use-Efi.jpg||thumb|200px|right|A female gorilla exhibiting tool use by using a tree trunk as a support while fishing.]]
[[Image:Gorrila tool use-Efi.jpg||thumb|200px|right|A female gorilla exhibiting tool use by using a tree trunk as a support whilst fishing.]]
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In September 2005, Thomas Breuer, a conservation [[biology|biologist]] with the Wildlife Conservation Society, led a team of researchers to [[Africa]] to observe gorillas. During the expedition they saw several examples of gorillas using tools in the wild. A female gorilla in the Nouabalé-Ndoki National Park in the [[Republic of Congo]] was recorded using a stick as if to gauge the depth of water while crossing a swamp. A second female was seen using a tree stump as a bridge and also as a support while fishing in the swamp. Subsequent to these observations, researchers have concluded that all great [[ape]]s are known to use tools (Breuer 2005).  
The following observations were made by a team led by Thomas Breuer of the Wildlife Conservation Society in September 2005. Gorillas are now known to use [[tool]]s in the wild. A female gorilla in the [[Nouabalé-Ndoki National Park]] in the [[Republic of Congo]] was recorded using a stick as if to gauge the depth of water whilst crossing a [[swamp]]. A second female was seen using a tree stump as a bridge and also as a support whilst fishing in the swamp. This means that all of the [[great ape]]s are now known to use tools.<ref>{{cite journal | last = Breuer | first = T | coauthors = Ndoundou-Hockemba M, Fishlock V | title=First Observation of Tool Use in Wild Gorillas | journal=PLoS Biol | year=2005 | pages=e380 | volume=3 | issue=11 | id=PMID 16187795 {{doi|10.1371/journal.pbio.0030380}}}}</ref>
 
  
In September 2005, a two and a half year old gorilla in the Republic of Congo was discovered using rocks to smash open palm nuts. While this was the first such observation for a gorilla, over forty years previously [[chimpanzee]]s had been seen using tools in the wild, famously 'fishing' for termites. Other animals also use tools, e.g. sea [[otter]]s use rocks on their chests to break sea urchins. It is a common tale among native peoples that gorillas have used rocks and sticks to thwart predators, even rebuking large mammals.{{cite needed}} Great apes are endowed with a semi-precision grip, and certainly have been able to use both simple tools and even weapons, by improvising a club from a convenient fallen branch. With training, in 20th Century carnival and circus acts, chimpanzees have been taught to operate simple motorbikes.
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In September 2005, a two and a half year old gorilla in the Republic of Congo was discovered using rocks to smash open palm nuts. While this was the first such observation for a gorilla, over 40 years previously [[chimpanzee]]s had been seen using tools in the wild, famously “fishing” for termites. Other animals also use tools; sea [[otter]]s, for example, place rocks on their chests to break sea urchins. Gorillas use sticks and rocks to thwart predators (Beck 1980). Great apes are endowed with a semi-precision grip, and have been able to use both simple tools and even weapons, by improvising a club from a convenient fallen branch.  
  
==Gorillas in pop culture==
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== Notes ==
{{main|Gorillas in popular culture}}
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<references/>
Giant gorillas have been a recurring theme in film since the 1930s. Following their popularity in the 1930s and 40s, most notably in the films [[King Kong]], [[Tarzan]], and [[Mighty Joe Young]], gorillas came to be heavily featured in [[comic book]]s. Short contrived gorilla plots were often included so that they could appear on the cover to boost sales.
 
 
 
Gorilla suits are an eternally popular gag costume, appearing in large numbers of TV shows since the 1950s. A number of sports teams have a gorilla as a mascot usually personified by an actor in a gorilla suit.
 
<!--please make fictional-gorilla additions to the sub-article at the link noted here —>
 
 
 
==See also==
 
*[[List of apes]] &mdash; notable individual apes
 
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
<references/>
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*Beck, B. B. ''Animal Tool Behavior: The Use and Manufacture of Tools by Animals.'' New York: Garland Press, 1980.
 
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*Breuer, T., M. Ndoundou-Hockemba, and V. Fishlock. First Observation of Tool Use in Wild Gorillas. ''PLoS biology'' 3 (2005):380.
== External links ==
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*Caillaud, D., et al. Gorilla susceptibility to Ebola virus: the cost of sociality. ''Current Biology'' 16 (2006):R489–91.
}
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*Chen, F. C., and W. H. Li. Genomic divergences between humans and other hominoids and the effective population size of the common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees. ''American Journal of Human Genetics'' 68 (2001): 444–56.  
*ARKive - [http://www.arkive.org/species/GES/mammals/Gorilla_gorilla/ images and movies of the western gorilla ''(Gorilla gorilla)'']
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*Groves, C. ''Mammal Species of the World,'' 3rd ed. Edited by D. E. Wilson, and D. M. Reeder. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005.
*ARKive - [http://www.arkive.org/species/GES/mammals/Gorilla_beringei/ images and movies of the eastern gorilla ''(Gorilla beringei)'']
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*Groves, C. A history of gorilla taxonomy. In ''Gorilla Biology: A Multidisciplinary Perspective.'' Edited by A. B. Taylor and M. L. Goldsmith. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002.
*[http://bagheera.com/inthewild/van_anim_gorilla.htm Bagheera] An educational website about Earth's Endangered Animals.
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*Müller, C. ''Geographici Graeci Minores'' (1855–61). Edited by J. Blomqvist, 1979.  
*[http://www.gorilla-haven.org/ghfamous.htm Gorilla Haven] - information about gorillas
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* [http://pin.primate.wisc.edu/factsheets/entry/gorilla Primate Factsheets: Gorilla.] ''Primate Info Net.'' Retrieved December 26, 2022.
*[http://homepage.mac.com/wildlifeweb/gorillas/ Gorillas Online] - natural history, genetics, conservation and photos
 
*[http://www.koko.org/ The Gorilla Foundation], home of Koko the gorilla famous for her sign language skills
 
*[http://homepage.mac.com/wildlifeweb/gorillas/images/ Tim Knight's Gorilla Gallery] - gorilla pictures
 
*[http://pin.primate.wisc.edu/factsheets/entry/gorilla Primate Info Net ''Gorilla'' Factsheet] - taxonomy, ecology, behavior and conservation
 
*[http://www.sandiegozoo.org/animalbytes/t-gorilla.html San Diego Zoo Gorilla Factsheet] - features a video and photos
 
*[http://www.worldwildlife.org/gorillas/ World Wildlife Fund: Gorillas] - conservation, facts and photos
 
*[http://www.berggorilla.org/ Mountain Gorilla] - and also a lot of facts about gorillas
 
*[http://www.rozhlas.cz/unmasking/portal/ Gorillas at Prague Zoo] - hit reality-tv show (24/7) of live gorillas at the Prague Zoo
 
*[http://www.gorillahub.com/GorillaQuickFacts.htm Gorilla quick facts]
 
*[http://www.gorillafund.org/ The Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund International]
 
  
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[[Category:Life sciences]]
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[[Category:Mammals]]
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[[Category:Animals]]
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[[Category:Primates]]
  
 
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[[Category:Life sciences]]
 

Latest revision as of 07:13, 1 January 2024

Gorillas
Gorilla-hand.jpg
Hand of a Gorilla at San Diego Zoo
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Primates
Family: Hominidae
Genus: Gorilla
I Geoffroy, 1853
Type species
Troglodytes gorilla
Savage, 1847
Species

Gorilla gorilla
Gorilla beringei


The gorilla, the largest of the living primates is a ground-dwelling herbivore that inhabits limited regions of forest in central Africa. The gorilla occurs in two species, the western gorilla and the eastern gorilla. Both species are endangered due to poaching, loss of habitat, and death caused by the ebola virus. Gorilla DNA is 98 percent identical to that of humans, making them the second closest living relative to humans, after the two chimpanzee species (Chen 2001).

Gorillas are apes in the superfamily Hominoidea and the family Hominidae known also as the "great apes" and comprising humans,[1] the gorillas, chimpanzees, and orangutans. All other apes belong to the family Hylobatidae and are known as the "lesser apes" (gibbons).

Physical characteristics

Gorillas move around by knuckle-walking. Adult males range in height from 165 to 175 centimeters (5 feet 5 inches to 5 feet 9 inches), and in weight from 140 to 165 kilograms (310 to 365 pounds). Females are about half the weight of males. Gorillas' facial structure is described as prognathous; that is, their mandible, or lower jaw, protrudes further out than the maxilla, upper jaw.

Gestation (the carrying of the embryo or fetus inside the female prior to birth) is eight and a half months. Infants stay with their mothers for three to four years, and females typically do not have more offspring during that time. Females mature when they are 10 to 12 years old (earlier in captivity); males mature between the ages of 11 and 13. Gorillas live to be 30 to 50 years old. The oldest gorilla on record is the Philadelphia Zoo's Massa, who lived to be 54.

Gorillas are mainly vegetarian, eating fruits, leaves, and shoots, but they also eat insects. Due to their diet of plant life, gorillas often have bloated stomachs.

Almost all gorillas share the same blood type, B, and have individual fingerprints, like humans.

Classification

Scientists for decades divided gorillas into three species: the Western Lowland Gorilla, the Eastern Lowland Gorilla, and the Mountain Gorilla. Primatologists now generally divide gorillas into two species, the Western Gorilla (Gorilla gorilla) and the Eastern Gorilla (Gorilla Beringei), with at least two subspecies for each. A third subspecies for one of the Eastern Gorilla is also claimed.

Western lowland gorilla

Primatologists continue to explore the relationships between various gorilla populations (Groves 2002). The species and subspecies listed below are the ones most scientists agree upon (Groves 2005).

  • Genus Gorilla
    • Western Gorilla (Gorilla gorilla)
      • Western Lowland Gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla)
      • Cross River Gorilla (Gorilla gorilla diehli)
    • Eastern Gorilla (Gorilla beringei)
      • Mountain Gorilla (Gorilla beringei beringei)
      • Eastern Lowland Gorilla (Gorilla beringei graueri)

The proposed third subspecies of the Eastern Gorilla, Gorilla beringei, which has not received a full Latin designation, is the Bwindi population of the Mountain Gorilla, sometimes called Bwindi Gorilla.

Name

The American physician and missionary Thomas Staughton Savage first described the Western Gorilla (he called it Troglodytes gorilla) in 1847 from specimens obtained in Liberia. The name derived from the Gorillai, a "tribe of hairy women," described by Hanno the Navigator, a Carthaginian navigator and possible visitor (circa 480 B.C.E.) to the area that later became Sierra Leone (Müller 1979).

Endangerment

Both species of gorilla are endangered, and have been subject to intense poaching. Threats to gorilla survival include habitat destruction and the bushmeat trade. A population of several hundred gorillas in the Odzala National Park, Republic of Congo was essentially wiped out in 2004 by the Ebola virus (Caillaud 2006).

Behavior

A silverback gorilla

A silverback is an adult male gorilla, typically more than 12 years old and named for the distinctive patch of silver hair on his back. Silverbacks have large canines that come with maturity. Blackbacks are sexually mature males of up to 11 years of age.

Silverbacks are the strong, dominant troop leaders. Each typically leads a troop of five to 30 gorillas and is the center of the troop's attention, making all the decisions, mediating conflicts, determining the movements of the group, leading the others to feeding sites, and taking responsibility for the safety and well-being of the troop.

Gorilla at the Cincinnati Zoo

Males slowly begin to leave their original troop when they are about 11 years old, traveling alone or with a group of other males for two to five years before they attract females to form a new group and start breeding. While infant gorillas normally stay with their mother for three to four years, silverbacks will care for weaned young orphans, though never to the extent of carrying the little gorillas.

If challenged by a younger male or even by an outsider male, a silverback will scream, beat his chest, break branches, bare his teeth, then charge forward. Sometimes a younger male in the group can take over leadership from an old male. If the leader is killed by disease, accident, fighting, or poachers, the group will split up and individuals will look for a new protective male. Though extremely rare, a group might be taken over in its entirety by another male. In this case, the new leader may kill the infants of the dead silverback.

Studies

  • Nineteenth century. The first known study of gorillas was in 1867. The French researcher heading the project read legends about gorillas, then wrote tall tales. He portrayed them as dangerous animals that would raid villages and rape women.
  • Early twentieth century. The next known systematic study was not conducted until the 1920s, when Carl Akely of the American Museum of Natural History traveled to Africa to hunt for an animal to be shot and stuffed. On his first trip, he was accompanied by two friends, Mary Bradley, a famous mystery writer, and her husband. After their trip, Mary Bradley wrote On the Gorilla Trail. She later became an advocate for the conservation of gorillas and wrote several more books, mostly children’s books. In the late 1920s and early 1930s, Robert Yerkes and his wife Ava helped further the study of gorillas when they sent Harold Bigham to Africa. Yerkes also wrote a book in 1929 about the great apes.
  • Mid-twentieth century. After World War II, George Schaller was one of the first researchers to go into the field and study primates. In 1959, he conducted a systematic study of the Mountain Gorilla in the wild and published his work. Years later, at the behest of Louis Leakey, Dian Fossey conducted a much longer and more comprehensive study of the Mountain Gorilla. It was not until she published her work that many misconceptions and myths about gorillas were finally disproved, including the myth that gorillas are violent.

Intelligence

Gorillas are closely related to humans and are considered to be highly intelligent. A few individuals in captivity, such as Koko, have been taught a subset of sign language.

A female gorilla exhibiting tool use by using a tree trunk as a support while fishing.

In September 2005, Thomas Breuer, a conservation biologist with the Wildlife Conservation Society, led a team of researchers to Africa to observe gorillas. During the expedition they saw several examples of gorillas using tools in the wild. A female gorilla in the Nouabalé-Ndoki National Park in the Republic of Congo was recorded using a stick as if to gauge the depth of water while crossing a swamp. A second female was seen using a tree stump as a bridge and also as a support while fishing in the swamp. Subsequent to these observations, researchers have concluded that all great apes are known to use tools (Breuer 2005).

In September 2005, a two and a half year old gorilla in the Republic of Congo was discovered using rocks to smash open palm nuts. While this was the first such observation for a gorilla, over 40 years previously chimpanzees had been seen using tools in the wild, famously “fishing” for termites. Other animals also use tools; sea otters, for example, place rocks on their chests to break sea urchins. Gorillas use sticks and rocks to thwart predators (Beck 1980). Great apes are endowed with a semi-precision grip, and have been able to use both simple tools and even weapons, by improvising a club from a convenient fallen branch.

Notes

  1. The issue of where to place humans taxonomically has been contentious in the past with many people not feeling comfortable to be categorized as an ape. At the level of academic biologists, however, the issue is settled. The fundamental issue is not about biology but about the presumption by many that a distinctive human spirit, thought process, and behavior set humans apart from the gorillas and chimpanzees. Shifting the academic foundations in relation to these presumptions would be prerequisite to resolving the categorization issue.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Beck, B. B. Animal Tool Behavior: The Use and Manufacture of Tools by Animals. New York: Garland Press, 1980.
  • Breuer, T., M. Ndoundou-Hockemba, and V. Fishlock. First Observation of Tool Use in Wild Gorillas. PLoS biology 3 (2005):380.
  • Caillaud, D., et al. Gorilla susceptibility to Ebola virus: the cost of sociality. Current Biology 16 (2006):R489–91.
  • Chen, F. C., and W. H. Li. Genomic divergences between humans and other hominoids and the effective population size of the common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees. American Journal of Human Genetics 68 (2001): 444–56.
  • Groves, C. Mammal Species of the World, 3rd ed. Edited by D. E. Wilson, and D. M. Reeder. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005.
  • Groves, C. A history of gorilla taxonomy. In Gorilla Biology: A Multidisciplinary Perspective. Edited by A. B. Taylor and M. L. Goldsmith. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002.
  • Müller, C. Geographici Graeci Minores (1855–61). Edited by J. Blomqvist, 1979.
  • Primate Factsheets: Gorilla. Primate Info Net. Retrieved December 26, 2022.

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