Gorillas are the largest
of the great apes. A male can weigh from 450-500 pounds and, when
standing upright, can measure up to six feet. Females are smaller,
weighing about 200 pounds.
There are three different
subspecies of gorillas. The most abundant species is the western
lowland gorilla; populations are estimated at about 40,000. Eastern
lowland gorillas, found only in Zaire, number from 3,000 to 5,000.
The mountain gorilla is the most endangered of the three subspecies.
There are no mountain gorillas in zoos today.
Mountain gorillas live in
social groups ranging from two to more than 35 individuals. The leader
of each group is a mature male called a "silverback," because of the silver
hair on his back. A male's hair will start to turn silver around
age 11. The silver-back is the center of attention in the group,
with the other gorillas congregating around him during periods of rest
and play. An average group of 10 individuals might consist of the
silverback, one "blackback" (an 8-12 year old male), three or four sexually
mature females, and three to six juveniles and infants.
Females first breed at about
age 10; males first breed around age 15. Gestation is from eight
to nine months, resulting in a baby weighing four to five pounds.
A baby is dependent on its mother for three years while it learns to build
nests and forage for food. The mother holds her infant until it is
about four months old, after which it is able to ride on her back, clinging
to her fur. Females bear a single baby every four to five years.
Mountain gorillas eat large
amounts of vegetation from more than 70 different plant species, including
wild celery, gallium, vines, berries, bamboo, roots and bark. When
the bamboo plant sprouts in June and November, bamboo shoots can make up
to 90 percent of the gorilla's diet. A silverback can eat up to 75
pounds of bamboo each day; females might eat about 40 pounds per day.
Gorillas spend about 30 percent of the day eating, 40 percent resting and
sleeping and 30 percent traveling. Led by the silver-back, gorillas
travel around a large range, foraging for food. Each night they build
fresh grass nests.
Each mountain gorilla is
truly an individual. Scientists use the distinctive "nose prints"
of gorillas to identify them. The late Dr. Dian Fossey, the scientist
whose observations of gorillas in the wild brought their plight international
recognition, documented the gorillas' unique nose patterns, using photographs
and illustrations in much the same way that scientists use photographs
of flukes to identify individual humpback whales.