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Like
the other apes, gorillas feed on seasonal fruits and disperse seeds
in their dung as they travel from region to region. Because of new
plant growth that occurs in bright sunlight, gorillas like to forage
in areas cleared by elephants, storms, and even people. They leave
behind seeds that generate new growth.
There
are only five subspecies of gorilla left in the wild. Habitat loss
and poaching are the main causes behind gorilla deaths.
Mbeli
Bai Gorilla Study:
Busch Gardens is the primary financial support for this behavioral
and ecological study on lowland gorillas which is part of the Noubale-Ndoki
Project supported by Wildlife Conservation Society in Northern Congo.
Busch
Gardens continues to support the Mbeli Bai study of western lowland
gorillas being conducted in the remote region of the Nouabale-Ndoki
National Park in Africa's northern Congo. Coordinated by the Wildlife
Conservation Society and supervised by project director Michael
Fay, the study's focus on the rarely seen ecology and social behavior
of the lowland gorilla is resulting in ground-breaking data on this
fascinating and endangered species.
Studying
the lowland gorilla in its natural surroundings is helping provide
insights into developing more effective conservation strategies
for preserving both the species and its environment. Acquiring such
elusive data will also contribute to designing high-quality zoological
environments like Busch Gardens' award-winning Myombe Reserve: The
Great Ape Domain.
As
the project enters its third year, data collection is being extended
to identify more specific social behaviors of lowland gorillas --
both groups and individuals -- and their interaction with their
environment. Research includes social behaviors, non vocal and gesture-based
communication, range patterns as they relate to food sources and
DNA "fingerprinting" which provides genetic descriptions
of the Mbeli population.
To
maximize their exposure to the remote conditions seen in Mbeli,
researchers also are studying ecological behaviors of other species
in the region when lowland gorillas are not present such as elephants,
Congo clawless otters and black and white Colobus monkeys.
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