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Simply Ecologist

Simply Ecologist
Ecology Made Simple
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Published
Author Erzsebet Frey

Upon rising from their night nests, gorillas spread out to forage. The animals sit on their haunches or eat while walking. Gorilla b. beringei is terrestrial for 96% of feeding time. Adults climb for only 4% of feeding time, while immatures feed in trees 18% of the time. Adult males eat up to 30 kg of vegetation per day. There is little competition between individuals, as food is generally abundant.

Published
Author Erzsebet Frey

Western gorillas are endemic to western central Africa where they live; Gorilla g. gorilla is distributed over six or seven countries from south of Sanaga R. south through S. Cameroon, SW Central African Republic, mainland Equatorial Guinea (Rio Muni/Mbini), and Gabon, into extreme N. Angola (Cabinda enclave) to Congo R., and east into W. Congo and across the Sangha R. to about the Oubangui R. Western boundary is the Atlantic Ocean.

Published
Author Erzsebet Frey

Due to its large size, the gorilla has only two major predators. Humans are by far the main predator of G. gorilla, killing animals for their meat, and body parts and in retaliation for damage to crops. Leopards are important predators at some sites, with G. gorilla accounting for 4–9% of biomass consumed. Gorilla gorilla, like G.beringei, is prone to many pests and diseases.

Published
Author Erzsebet Frey

The majority of western lowland gorillas are in Gabon and Congo. Their number in Gabon was estimated at between 28,000 and 42,000 in the early 1980s. Congo had a similar number in 1989–1990. Cameroon held ca. 15,000 gorillas in 1998. Equatorial Guinea (Rio Muni/Mbini) supported >3000 G. g. gorilla in 2011. In 2009, the total number of western gorillas was estimated at >150,000.