Know your way around Mountain Gorillas before you book your Gorilla excursion to Africa (Uganda). It is necessary to provide to our clients s relevant information about these tremendous creatures. This information gives you a chance to prepare yourself on what to expect or see on your Gorilla Safari.
1. Mountain Gorillas are primates containing the largest of the apes. The Gorillas are one of the closest living relatives to humans. Only the Chimpanzee and the bonobo are closer. Gorillas live only in tropical rain forests of equatorial Africa. Most authorities recognize two species and four subspecies of them, but the western Gorillas (Gorilla gorilla) is made up of two subspecies which are the western lowland Gorilla (G. gorilla gorilla), which inhabits the lowland rain forest from Cameroon to the Congo River and the Cross River gorilla (G. gorilla Diehl), which inhabits a small forested region along the Cross River separating Nigeria from Cameroon.
2.The eastern Gorilla (G. beringei) is also made up of two subspecies which are the eastern lowland, or Grauer’s, Gorilla (G. beringei graueri), of the lowland rainforests of the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, and the Mountain Gorillas (G. beringei beringei), found in the montane rainforests and bamboo forests of the highland terrain north and east of Lake Kivu, near the borders of Uganda, Rwanda and Congo.
3.Gorillas are powerful, with an extremely thick, strong chest and a protruding abdomen. Their skin and hair are black. The face has large nostrils, small ears, and prominent brow ridges. Adults have long, muscular arms that are 15–20 percent longer than the stocky legs. Males are about twice as heavy as females and may attain a height of about 1.7 meters (5.5 feet) and weight (in the wild) of 135–220 kg (300–485 pounds). Captive gorillas of both sexes may grow quite fat and hence become much heavier. A wild adult female typically is about 1.5 metres tall and weighs about 70–90 kg.
4.Gorillas lack hair on their face, hands, and feet, and the chest of old males is bare. The hair of G. beringei beringei is longer than that of the other three subspecies. Adult males have a prominent crest on top of the skull and a “saddle” of gray or silver hairs on the lower part of the back, hence the term silverback which is commonly used to refer to mature males. This saddle is much more cons pious in eastern Gorillas (G. beringei), which are jet black, than in western Gorillas (G. gorilla), which are more of a deep gray-brown.
5.Gorillas live in stable family groups numbering from 6 to 30. The groups are led by one or two (most of the time) silverback males that are related to each other, usually a father and one or more of his sons. Occasionally brothers lead a group. The other members are females, infants, juveniles, and young adult males (blackbucks). Adult females join from outside the group, and the young are offspring of silverbacks.
6.The Gorillas are active during the day (diurnal) and primarily terrestrial, usually walking about on all four limbs with part of their weight supported on the knuckles of their hands. This mode of locomotion, called knuckle walking, is shared with the Chimpanzees. Occasionally Gorillas stand erect, mainly when displaying. Females and young climb more than males, mainly because much vegetation cannot support the weight of the males.
7.Their diet is vegetarian, though that of eastern Gorillas includes leaves, stalks, and shoots, but western Gorillas eat much more fruits. Gorillas generally dislike water, but in some areas, such as the Sangha-Ndoki region on the borders of Cameroon, the Republic of the Congo (Brazzaville), and the Central African Republic they wade waist-deep into swampy clearings to feed on aquatic plants.
8.Gorillas spend much of their time foraging and resting, with the group traveling a few hundred meters between several daily feeding bounds. Each group wanders through a home range of about 2–40 square km (0.77–16 square miles), though several different groups may share the same part of the Forest. At dusk each Gorilla builds its own crude sleeping nest by bending branches and foliage. A new nest is built for every night either on the ground or in the trees.
9.Gorillas are much larger than their closest relative, the Chimpanzees and has less boisterous disposition, although they are relatively quiet animals and the repertoire of Gorilla calls which includes grunts, hoots, a terrifying alarm bark, and the roar, which is given by aggressive males. Much has been written about the ferocity of the Gorilla, but studies indicate that it is unaggressive, even shy, unless unduly disturbed. Intruders may be faced by the leading silverback of the group, which may make aggressive displays in attempting to protect his dependents.
10.Such displays commonly involve chest beating, vocalization, or short rushes toward the intruder followed in most instances by a discreet withdrawal. Chest beating is performed by both males and females, but it is much louder in males because air sacs in the throat and chest make the sound more resonant. Chest beating is often part of a ritual that may also include running sideways, tearing at vegetation, and slapping the ground. In addition to intimidating outsiders (Gorillas or human), these displays also act as communication between groups and are often used to maintain the dominance hierarchy within the group.
11.Gorillas lack the curiosity and adaptability of Chimpanzees, but they are calmer and more persistent. They appear to be as adept as Chimpanzees at learning sign language from humans. Some Gorillas can recognize their image in a mirror and can thus be said to have a limited sense of self-awareness. This trait is shared with Chimpanzees and orangutans. Only a few other nonhuman animals possess that ability.
12.Wild female Gorillas give birth about once every four years and there is no fixed breeding season. The gestation period is about eight and a half months, and they always give birth to one, though twins occur on rare occasions. A newborn Gorilla weighs only about 2kg and is utterly helpless for the first three months of life, during this period it is carried in its mother’s arms. The young Gorilla sleeps in the mother’s nest at night and rides on her back during the day.
13.Female Gorillas begin to reach reproductive maturity at about 10 years of age and then transfer to another group or to a lonely silverback. Males reach sexual maturity at about age 9, but they do not reproduce until they become more physically mature silverbacks at about 12–15 years of age. Most male Gorillas leave the group in which they were born and try to gather females to form their own family group. This may involve some aggression since a young male may invade an established group and try to “kidnap” females, sometimes killing infants in the process. Males will stay in their birth group and become its second silverback, breeding with some of the females and ultimately taking over its leadership when his father ages or dies. The life expectancy of wild Gorillas is about 35 years, though captive Gorillas have lived into their 40s.
14.The Gorilla has become increasingly rare throughout its range, having suffered from human destruction of its forest habitat and from big-game hunting and over collection by zoos and research institutions. A newer threat is hunting associated with the bush meat trade, especially to feed logging crews. With respect to eastern Gorillas, the international union for conservation of nature (IUCN) has listed both the eastern lowland Gorilla (G. beringei graueri) and the Mountain Gorilla (G. beringei beringei) as critically endangered subspecies.
15.Mountain gorilla information, The adult population of the Mountain Gorilla is about 900. Reasons for the near extinction of this subspecies include continued loss of habitat as a result of human activities like farming, grazing, lodging, and, recently, habitat destruction by refugees. At the same time, ecotourism involving visits by travelers to see Gorillas in their natural habitat has contributed to the conservation of the Mountain Gorillas.
Population estimates of the western lowland Gorilla, once classified by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) as critically endangered, doubled in 2008 with the discovery of a previously unknown population. This population, numbering more than 100,000, inhabits the swamps of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
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