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The Western Lowland Gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) is a large African primate featured in the Standard Edition of Planet Zoo.

Zoopedia Description[]

General[]

Population in the Wild: 150,000-250,000

The Western Lowland Gorilla (or Gorilla gorilla gorilla) is native to Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Republic of the Congo and Southern Niger, living and foraging in the rainforests, swamp forests, and abandoned farmland there. They have black skin dark forward-facing eyes, a prominent brow ridge, large nostrils and coarse hair which covers most of their body except the face, ears, hands, and feet. Males are much larger than females, and when they mature, the hair on their backs becomes grey and they are identified as 'silverbacks'.

The species is critically endangered due to deforestation, poaching and the spread of disease-young gorillas leave their home group for a new group when they reach adulthood, and this means that disease can spread very quickly among groups. The Republic of Congo is investing in conservation of their rainforests to prevent deforestation and species loss.

Social[]

Gorillas are social animals, living in small groups with an approximately even split of male and females. There will usually be one dominant male, known as the silverback - although there can occasionally be two; a father and son - who leads the group when foraging or travelling. Despite individuals within groups being unrelated, the females will have very strong bonds with each other and their silverback, not leaving him in favour of another male once their group has been established.

Reproduction[]

When a female gorilla is fertile, she will slowly approach the silverback and attempt to get his attention by maintaining eye contact and puckering her lips. If he does not respond, she will pound the ground near him; if the bid is successful, the male will mate with her. The mother is pregnant for 8.5 months before giving birth to one baby, which she will care for closely until the infants are around 4-years-old, when their offspring begin to gain significant independence. At between 9 and 10 years old, young gorillas both male and female will leave their family group; females will search for a group to join, whereas males will be solitary for some time until they are mature enough to become silverbacks and form their own group.

Animal Care[]

PREFERRED OBJECTS

Monkey Chow Ā· Fruit, Leaves and Vegetables Ā· Herbaceous Stems

FEEDING STATIONS
Arboreal Feeding Platform Ā· Water Bowl Ā· Water Pipe

FOOD ENRICHMENT
Suspended Forager Ā· Large Fixed Roller Feeder Ā· Block of Frozen Fruit Ā· Tool Puzzle Feeder Ā· Forage Box Enrichment Ā· Tree Forager

HABITAT ENRICHMENT
Climbing Frame Ā· Large Ball Ā· Sprinkler Ā· Grab Ball Ā· Cardboard Box Ā· Ice Block Ā· Mirror Mobile Ā· Musical Keyboard Ā· Bobbin Ā· Small Ball Ā· Large Snow Ball Ā· Small Ice Ball Enrichment Ā· Gift Box Ā· Bobbin Drum Ā· Small Ball Colourful Ā· Small tyre Ā· Rubber Duck

COMPATIBLE ANIMALS

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Trivia[]

Zoopedia Fun Facts[]

  1. Gorillas are the largest primate species.
  2. Gorillas are incredibly important to the forests in which they live because their feeding and roaming habits disperse fruit seeds.
  3. Gorillas build nests daily that they sleep in at night; these nests are usually in trees.
  4. Gorillas create and use tools, using branches they have modified to get food that is out of reach, or to measure the depth of water.
  5. Gorillas have been taught sign language successfully - Koko the gorilla, born in San Francisco Zoo, learned over 1100 signs.

Gallery[]

ANIMAL NAVIGATION
STANDARD: HABITAT
Aardvark ā€¢ African Buffalo ā€¢ African Savannah Elephant ā€¢ African Wild Dog ā€¢ Aldabra Giant Tortoise ā€¢ American Bison ā€¢ Bactrian Camel ā€¢ Baird's Tapir ā€¢ Bengal Tiger ā€¢ Black Wildebeest ā€¢ Bongo ā€¢ Bonobo ā€¢ Bornean Orangutan ā€¢ Cheetah ā€¢ Chinese Pangolin ā€¢ Common Ostrich ā€¢ Common Warthog ā€¢ Formosan Black Bear ā€¢ Galapagos Giant Tortoise ā€¢ Gemsbok ā€¢ Gharial ā€¢ Giant Panda ā€¢ Greater Flamingo ā€¢ Grizzly Bear ā€¢ Himalayan Brown Bear ā€¢ Hippopotamus ā€¢ Indian Elephant ā€¢ Indian Peafowl ā€¢ Indian Rhinoceros ā€¢ Japanese Macaque ā€¢ Mandrill ā€¢ Nile Monitor ā€¢ Nyala ā€¢ Okapi ā€¢ Plains Zebra ā€¢ Pronghorn Antelope ā€¢ Red Panda ā€¢ Red Ruffed Lemur ā€¢ Reticulated Giraffe ā€¢ Ring Tailed Lemur ā€¢ Sable Antelope ā€¢ Saltwater Crocodile ā€¢ Siberian Tiger ā€¢ Snow Leopard ā€¢ Spotted Hyena ā€¢ Springbok ā€¢ Timber Wolf ā€¢ West African Lion ā€¢ Western Chimpanzee ā€¢ Western Lowland Gorilla
ANNIVERSARY UPDATES
Black-and-White Ruffed Lemur ā€¢ Collared Peccary ā€¢ Red Deer
STANDARD: EXHIBIT
Amazonian Giant Centipede ā€¢ Boa Constrictor ā€¢ Brazilian Salmon Pink Tarantula ā€¢ Brazilian Wandering Spider ā€¢ Common Death Adder ā€¢ Eastern Brown Snake ā€¢ Giant Burrowing Cockroach ā€¢ Giant Desert Hairy Scorpion ā€¢ Giant Forest Scorpion ā€¢ Giant Tiger Land Snail ā€¢ Gila Monster ā€¢ Golden Poison Frog ā€¢ Goliath Beetle ā€¢ Goliath Birdeater ā€¢ Goliath Frog ā€¢ Green Iguana ā€¢ Lehmann's Poison Frog ā€¢ Lesser Antillean Iguana ā€¢ Mexican Red Knee Tarantula ā€¢ Puff Adder ā€¢ Titan Beetle ā€¢ Western Diamondback Rattlesnake ā€¢ Yellow Anaconda
DELUXE EDITION
Komodo Dragon ā€¢ Pygmy Hippo ā€¢ Thomson's Gazelle
ARCTIC PACK
Arctic Wolf ā€¢ Dall Sheep ā€¢ Polar Bear ā€¢ Reindeer
SOUTH AMERICA PACK
Colombian White-Faced Capuchin Monkey ā€¢ Giant Anteater ā€¢ Jaguar ā€¢ Llama ā€¢ Red-Eyed Tree Frog
AUSTRALIA PACK
Dingo ā€¢ Koala ā€¢ Red Kangaroo ā€¢ Southern Cassowary ā€¢ Eastern Blue Tongued Lizard
AQUATIC PACK
Cuvier's Dwarf Caiman ā€¢ Giant Otter ā€¢ Grey Seal ā€¢ King Penguin ā€¢ Diamondback Terrapin
SOUTHEAST ASIA ANIMAL PACK
Binturong ā€¢ Clouded Leopard ā€¢ Dhole ā€¢ Malayan Tapir ā€¢ North Sulawesi Babirusa ā€¢ Proboscis Monkey ā€¢ Sun Bear ā€¢ Giant Malaysian Leaf Insect
AFRICA PACK
African Penguin ā€¢ Fennec Fox ā€¢ Meerkat ā€¢ Southern White Rhinoceros ā€¢ Sacred Scarab Beetle
NORTH AMERICA ANIMAL PACK
American Alligator ā€¢ Arctic Fox ā€¢ Black-Tailed Prairie Dog ā€¢ California Sea Lion ā€¢ Cougar ā€¢ Moose ā€¢ North American Beaver ā€¢ American Bullfrog
EUROPE PACK
Alpine Ibex ā€¢ Eurasian Lynx ā€¢ European Badger ā€¢ European Fallow Deer ā€¢ Fire Salamander
WETLANDS ANIMAL PACK
Asian Small-Clawed Otter ā€¢ Capybara ā€¢ Nile Lechwe ā€¢ Platypus ā€¢ Red-Crowned Crane ā€¢ Spectacled Caiman ā€¢ Wild Water Buffalo ā€¢ Danube Crested Newt
CONSERVATION PACK
Amur Leopard ā€¢ Axolotl ā€¢ Przewalski's Horse ā€¢ Scimitar-Horned Oryx ā€¢ Siamang
TWILIGHT PACK
Common Wombat ā€¢ Egyptian Fruit Bat ā€¢ Raccoon ā€¢ Red Fox ā€¢ Striped Skunk
GRASSLANDS ANIMAL PACK
Blue Wildebeest ā€¢ Caracal ā€¢ Cloudless Sulphur ā€¢ Emu ā€¢ European Peacock ā€¢ Maned Wolf ā€¢ Menelaus Blue Morpho ā€¢ Monarch ā€¢ Nine-Banded Armadillo ā€¢ Old World Swallowtail ā€¢ Red-Necked Wallaby ā€¢ Striped Hyena
TROPICAL PACK
Asian Water Monitor ā€¢ Brown-throated Sloth ā€¢ Fossa ā€¢ Lar Gibbon ā€¢ Red River Hog
ARID ANIMAL PACK
Addax ā€¢ African Crested Porcupine ā€¢ Black Rhinoceros ā€¢ Dama Gazelle ā€¢ Desert Horned Viper ā€¢ Dromedary Camel ā€¢ Sand Cat ā€¢ Somali Wild Ass
OCEANIA PACK
Little Penguin ā€¢ North Island Brown Kiwi ā€¢ Quokka ā€¢ Spectacled Flying Fox ā€¢ Tasmanian Devil
EURASIA ANIMAL PACK
Hermann's Tortoise ā€¢ Mute Swan ā€¢ Saiga ā€¢ Sloth Bear ā€¢ Takin ā€¢ Wild Boar ā€¢ Wisent ā€¢ Wolverine
For the main article, see here.
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