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Mountain Gorilla Numbers on the Rise

New Count Released From Survey Increases Total Mountain Gorilla Population

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Silverback mountain gorilla
A silverback mountain gorilla in Uganda. (Skylar Bishop/Gorilla Doctors)

A 2018 survey shows that mountain gorilla numbers have increased in Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, Uganda, and Sarambwe Reserve, DR Congo, according to the Uganda Wildlife Authority. The 2018 Bwindi-Sarambwe mountain gorilla survey found a minimum of 459 mountain gorillas in these regions, an increase from the previous survey estimate in 2011 of 400.

When combined with the 2015-2016 population survey results of 604 mountain gorillas in the Virunga Massif, the total world population of endangered mountain gorillas now stands at 1,063. 

“Mountain gorillas are the only great ape in the wild whose numbers are increasing but their total population number is small so we must remain vigilant,” said Kirsten Gilardi, ’ executive director, chief veterinary officer and co-director of the at the University of California, Davis. “Given ongoing risks to mountain gorillas such as habitat encroachment, potential disease transmission, poaching and civil unrest, this increase should serve as both a celebration and a clarion call to all government, NGO and institutional partners to continue to collaborate in our work to ensure the survival of mountain gorillas.”

mountain gorilla family. Infant on parent's back.
An infant mountain gorilla from the Habinyanja group stands on its mother’s back in Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, Uganda. (Gorilla Doctors)

Census workers

Gorilla Doctors is a partnership between the Mountain Gorilla Veterinary Project Inc., and the Karen C. Drayer Wildlife Health Center at 51ԹϺ Davis. The group provides life-saving veterinary care to mountain gorillas in Uganda, Rwanda and DR Congo. It is credited for half of the annual population growth rate of human-habituated mountain gorillas, meaning gorillas that are accustomed to the close proximity of people to facilitate research and tourism.

From July 2018 to July 2019, in Bwindi Impenetrable National Park alone, Gorilla Doctors conducted 126 health checks and performed 23 veterinary interventions to treat ill or injured gorillas.

For the census, Gorilla Doctors served as part of the organizing team, participating throughout planning, execution and analysis of survey results, helping to train census workers and managing the storage and preparation of all fecal samples collected.

gorilla and human hand
A mountain gorilla and human hold hands. (Gorilla Doctors)

All DNA analysis was conducted by the of the Veterinary Genetics Laboratory, or MECU, at 51ԹϺ Davis, where they isolated and genotyped DNA from nearly 2,000 georeferenced fecal samples to identify individual and group identities associated with each one.

"The combination of noninvasive genetic approaches with massive and intensive field surveys in this collaboration of governments, NGOs, and institutional partners was key to determining the otherwise hidden numbers and group size dynamics of unhabituated mountain gorillas, which compose more than half of the population,” said Ben Sacks, director of MECU at the 51ԹϺ Davis Veterinary Genetics Laboratory. 

The MECU team also conducted data analysis and lead preparation of the . Gorilla Doctors collected and preserved additional fecal samples to study the impact of pathogens, including parasites, on gorilla health.

 

Infant mountain gorilla
An infant mountain gorilla from the Katwe group in Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, Uganda. (Gorilla Doctors)

Bwindi-Sarambwe census leadership

The 2018 Bwindi-Sarambwe population surveys of mountain gorillas, known as census, were conducted by the Protected Area Authorities in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo (Uganda Wildlife Authority and l’Institut Congolais pour la Conservation de la Nature) under the transboundary framework of the Greater Virunga Transboundary Collaboration.

The census was supported by the Rwanda Development Board, International Gorilla Conservation Programme (a coalition of Conservation International, Fauna & Flora International and WWF), Mammalian Ecology and Conservation Unit of the 51ԹϺ Davis Veterinary Genetics Laboratory, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, The Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund, Institute of Tropical Forest Conservation, Gorilla Doctors, Conservation Through Public Health, Wildlife Conservation Society Uganda Country Office, WWF Uganda Country Office, and Bwindi Mgahinga Conservation Trust.

The census was funded by Fauna & Flora International, WWF, and Partners in Conservation at the Columbus Zoo & Aquarium.

Media Resources

Amy Bond, 51ԹϺ Davis School of Veterinary Medicine/Gorilla Doctors, abond@gorilladoctors.org

Kat Kerlin, 51ԹϺ Davis News and Media Relations, 530-750-9195, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu

Ben Sacks, (530) 754-9088, bnsacks@ucdavis.edu

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