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Gorilla
safaris in East Africa are carried out in Uganda and Rwanda. They have a rich culture
and nature, they are also well known for mountain gorilla safaris which is the
largest living primate and world’s most endangered ape as well as the most
fascinating creature that could ever speak to your imagination.
They
do live in groups which consist of about 25 to 35 members and usually there is
one leading male which is accompanied by several female and the young ones. At
birth, a gorilla weighs on average 2.5 kilograms which is half of the weight of
a human baby though it develops twice as fast.
Within a period of forty (40) weeks, it can walk and reaching 3 years it
slowly becomes independent while at 6 years they are about 1.20 meter tall and
weigh almost 70 kilogram then it matures and continue gaining weight for the
next 4 years.
Gorillas
resemble human beings, their feet are like for human beings and do spend more
time on the ground and consequently gorillas are able to walk. They do share
about 98 percent of our DNA while their social qualities and relationships
within the family are very important, expressing their families. However,
despite on their impressive looks, gorillas are extremely gentle and peace
loving and in case of danger they stand up for each other to defend the weaker
ones while serious fights might occur when two leaders of different groups meet
each other.
Considered
as the largest great ape are the most endangered species of the great ape,
mountain gorillas do live in the afro montane forests in South Western Uganda,
Northwest Uganda and Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. They do live in most
impenetrable parts of the tropical forests of East-Africa with over 320
individuals inhabiting the slopes of the Virunga which stretches out from the border
area in Congo and over 300 being found in Bwindi National Paark in Uganda which
covers about 330 square kilometers.
On
reproduction, they do reproduce slowly, thus the world population does not
increase rapidly while their gestation period is approximately 8.5 months and
gorilla mothers do give birth to a baby once in every four (4) years. In most
cases,30 percent does not survive their first year because they are attacked by
diseases and accidents while others die because their father dies and another silver
back takes over and because of this, this new male often kills all the babies
of his predecessor, while securing this own genes in the posterity.
During
an ordinary day a mountain gorilla starts at sunrise early in the morning at 6
am and start looking for food which
covers quiet a big part of their morning . They do spend 30
percent of the day travelling, 30 percent feeding and 40 percent resting and
travel not more than a kilometre per day within their home range of about 20
square kilometers. They are vegetarians though occasionally they may eat
insects including ants. Majorly, their meals consist of roots, leaves, stems
and pith herbs, vines and fruits and their afternoons are mostly spent resting.
At the end of the day before the dusk, they start constructing a nest where
they spend the night and every single gorilla has to make its own nest.
Following
the discovery of gorillas in 1902 by a German explorer, later an American
scientist George Schaller studied these mountain gorillas in the Virunga
Volcanoes and Bwindi. This was followed on Dian Fossey who became famous
because of her movie “Gorillas in the mist”. Before she researched, an
estimated of about 450 mountain gorillas were living in the Virungas and only
20 years later, the population was decreased. It is very clear that the
mountain gorillas is one of the most endangered species in the world and to
make people protect the gorillas, it has been made possible to visit some
families.
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