Showing posts with label gorilla. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gorilla. Show all posts

January 16 – Happy Birthday, Dian Fossey

Posted on January 16, 2015


She lived with the apes!

Dian Fossey, who was born on this date in 1932, was such an important primatologist, she was considered one of the Trimates.

Okay, let's define some of those terms.

A primatologist is someone who studies primates: lemurs and their cousins, monkeys, and apes like chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans, and humans. In the case of Fossey, she studied gorillas in the African country of Rwanda.

The Trimates are a group of three important and famous researchers on primates: Dian Fossey studying gorillas, Jane Goodall studying chimpanzees, and Birute Galdikas studying orangutans. The anthropologist Louis Leakey encouraged these women to study the great apes in their natural environments.

Dian Fossey was born and raised in California, and she followed her step-father's advice to enroll in a business course at a college near her home in San Francisco. However, she loved-loved-loved animals, so she ended up switching to a pre-veterinary course so that she could work with animals. Her step-father didn't agree with her choice and chose not to support the choice financially. So Fossey worked hard at a variety of jobs while at university, and she ended up flunking out of the program! She had to change majors and colleges again, and she earned a bachelor's degree in occupational therapy in 1954. She interned and worked at occupational therapy at a variety of hospitals in California and Kentucky—and in 1963 she plunked down her life's savings and a year's salary worth of borrowed money in order to visit Africa for seven weeks.

Fossey traveled in Kenya, Tanzania, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Rhodesia. She met Louis and Mary Leakey at Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania, where the Leakeys were looking for early ancestors of humans. Louis Leakey told her about the work of Jane Goodall and explained the importance of long-term research on great apes. A bit later, Fossey was nursing a broken ankle near a photographer couple, and she was privileged to see some wild mountain gorillas. What a thrill!

When Fossey returned home to the U.S., she published three articles in the local newspaper about her visit to Africa. Later, when Leakey was on a lecture tour in the United States, Fossey attended the lecture, reintroduced herself to the anthropologist, and showed him those articles.

It wasn't long before Leakey invited Fossey to study gorillas; he started arranging for funding while she took classes in Swahili and primatology.

How do you do a long-term study of wild mountain gorillas? You have to go where they live, you have to live in a primitive camp, and you have to be very patient. One more thing, Fossey soon realized, is that you have to copy the gorillas to become accepted by them. She copied their gestures, their grunting sounds, and even their diet of the local celery plant. Eventually the gorillas allowed her a closer vantage point with which to study them.

Fossey had started her studies in the Congo, but there was political unrest and violent battles. In 1967 soldiers arrived at Fossey's camp to escort her and her research workers down the mountain. She ended up relocating to Rwanda, where she lived the next 18 years of her life—until she was murdered, probably by someone who was upset by her conservation and anti-poaching efforts.


Celebrate Fossey by learning about mountain gorillas

You might want to learn about the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund International, which Fossey founded. 

Enchanted Learning offers print-outs and quizzes about gorillas, and NationalGeographic Kids offers a slideshow and map. 

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December 22 – Happy Birthday, Colo

Posted on December 22, 2014

Colo is the oldest living gorilla in captivity in the world.

AND she is the first gorilla ever to be born in captivity! In the world!

Colo's name is a shortened version of her birthplace: COLumbus, Ohio. And she and four of her offspring are still delighting Columbus Zoo visitors--especially on a day like today: Colo's birthday!


Colo is 58 years old today.

Colo was called Cuddles for a short while after her birth on this date in 1956. Perhaps the zookeepers who called her that helped to raise her. It is sad to report that baby Colo had been rejected by her mother and had to be hand-raised and bottle-fed by the zookeepers. Later, the zoo held a contest in order to choose the best official name.

Colo apparently did far better in the parenting category than did her mother. She had her first baby at age 11, and she and her mate Bongo had three offspring. They were all named after awards: Emmy, Oscar, and Toni.

Colo and Bongo on their first
play date 
In 1979 Colo became a grandma when her granddaughter Cora was born. In 1995, she became a great-grandma. Finally, in 2003, Colo became a – you got it! – great, great grandma! At this point, Colo is the direct ancestor of 21 living gorillas and of other gorillas who have since died.


What do you think...?
...About animals being kept in zoos and put on display for humans to enjoy? Is it a good thing? A bad thing?

Did you know that zoos are a tool used to help species recover from near extinction? Did you know that, when people actually get to see and “meet” animals, they are much more passionate about helping them and keeping their wild spaces intact? Did you know that zookeepers often help species maintain genetic diversity?

To learn more about why zoos and aquaria are important, read this or that.

However, some zoos are not as good for animals as others, and certainly in the past zoos were pretty horrible to animals. “Are zoos good for wildlife?” is a really complicated question with a complicated answer!
You can see how small and unnatural
the old-style zoo enclosures were...
Nowadays we do a lot better.


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Anniversary of first string of Christmas lights 











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January 28, 2013 - Democracy Day in Rwanda

When I think of the tiny African nation of Rwanda, I don't think of democracy—I think of genocide.
That's because in the early 1990s Rwanda had a grisly civil war between two different ethnic groups, and in 1994 there was a horrific massacre. The word genocide means the deliberate killing of a particular group of people—and when Hutu extremists killed about a million Tutsi (and moderate Hutu)—well, that qualifies as genocide.

But Rwanda is trying to put that horrific past behind it and tell the world about the good things about the nation. Here are some of the “best of” Rwanda:

  • It is one of only two countries in which mountain gorillas can be seen, and gorilla tracking has helped tourism grow. Chimps, golden monkeys, and other primates live safely in Nyngwe Forest, another popular attraction.
  • Traditional arts include imigongo, which is cow dung art. (You read that right—it's made with cow poop!)

  • Rwanda was the first country to be ruled by a parliament in which women outnumber the men (after the 2008 elections).

  • Rwanda is attempting to become the Switzerland or Singapore of Africa. Like Switzerland and Singapore, it is a small nation that is positioning itself as very business-friendly. (And like Switzerland, Rwanda is landlocked and very mountainous. It is sometimes called the Land of 1000 Hills, and the entire nation lies at high latitudes.) Rwandan President Kagame is trying hard to make sure the cities and towns are clean and orderly, he has personally started a trade relationship in which CostCo and Starbucks buy Rwandan coffee, and he has succeeded in luring some tech companies, such as Google, to invest in his nation.

Check out photos of Rwanda here and also over here.



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