Gorillas Last Respects Similar To Human Behavior

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Twilight_Star
warthog keeper
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Post by Twilight_Star »

BROOKFIELD, Illinois (AP) -- After Babs the gorilla died at age 30, keepers at Brookfield Zoo decided to allow surviving gorillas to mourn the most influential female in their social family.

One by one Tuesday, the gorillas filed into the Tropic World building where Babs' body lay, arms outstretched. Curator Melinda Pruett Jones called it a "gorilla wake."

Babs' 9-year-old daughter, Bana, was the first to approach the body, followed by Babs' mother, Alpha, 43. Bana sat down, held Babs' hand and stroked her mother's stomach. Then she sat down and laid her head on Babs' arm.

"It was like they used to do in the exhibit, lying side by side on the mountain," keeper Betty Green said. "Then Bana rose up and looked at us and moved to Babs' other side, tucked her head under the other arm, and stroked Babs' stomach."

Other gorillas also approached Babs and gently sniffed the body. Only the silverback male leader, Ramar, 36, stayed away.

Keepers said the display wasn't surprising.

"She was the dominant female of the group, the peacekeeper, the disciplinarian, the one who kept things in a harmonious state," Pruett Jones said.

Koola, 9, brought her infant daughter, whom Babs had showered with attention since her birth in August.

"Koola inspected Babs' mouth for a while, then held her baby close to Babs, like she loved to do the last couple months, letting Babs admire her," Green said.

Babs had an incurable kidney condition and was euthanized Tuesday. Keepers had recently seen a videotape of a gorilla wake at the Columbus, Ohio, zoo and decided they would do the same for Babs. Gorillas in the wild have been known to pay respects to their dead, keepers said.

"I had a headache for the rest of the day after all the tears I cried watching them," Green said.


Reading this amazed me.. I figured I would share it with all of you.
phantom
llama keeper
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Location: Fort Collins CO

Post by phantom »

Primates are so amazing when it comes to animal behavior and the similarity to human emotions. One wonders if they display human emotions or if we display primate emotions?. If anynone is interested in knowing more about primate behavior I can recommend a couple of books I read in animal behavior class that are now among my favorite books:

"Gorillas in the Mist" by Dian Fossey
"In the Shadow of Man" and "Through a Window" by Jane Goodall.

The emotions displayed by the gorillas and the chimps in these books are incredible.
"Close your eyes,Let your spirit start to soar,And you'll live,As you never lived before" The Phantom of the Opera

"I'm not going out there without a bulletproof couch" -Sid Freedman; M*A*S*H*
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Quicksilver
ostrich keeper
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Location: Omaha, NE

Post by Quicksilver »

I read about that on CNN yesterday....it is incredible. And people say animals are dumb. I think this proves the opposite.
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okapi_07
ostrich keeper
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Location: Urbana, OH

Post by okapi_07 »

that is really interesting
I'm guessing the tape the keepers saw was probably of Sylvia who was euthanized in August (and strangly, another primate (angolan colobus)7 in her area was born the next day)because she was discovered to have inoperable cancer
I never knew they did wakes at the columbus zoo

another good book i read is Gorillas in our Midst, a history of the columbus zoo gorillas (the title is obviously a parody of Fossey's book)
a major part of that book is about Colo, the first gorilla born in captivity, who still lives at the zoo she turns 48 this month and many gorillas die in their 30s (i believe most or all of her offspring have already passed)

great ape behavior is very interesting and in the past, some have been trained to act even more human-like (in the above-mentioned book there are pictures of Colo as a baby dressed in a dress and bonnet in the nursury) but seeing how human-like their natural behavior is is even better
yellowrose
zoo tour guide
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Post by yellowrose »

I love primates but have never read the books but have watched a lot of movies including Gorillas in the Mist which made me cry.

As for those that consider animals dumb....well an animal is only as dumb as the mind that is percieving it. ;)
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