Gorilla reunion!
I love all animals, but I've always had a soft spot for Primates.
I have a diploma in Primatology, and another in Zoology. I have a BA (Hons) degree in Media, which I wish I'd never done.
I have recently become a voluntary Ambassador for Wild Futures, a UK based primate charity and sanctuary.
I'm also a huge Potterhead, and would have studied Care of Magical Creatures at NEWT level if only my letter hadn't gotten lost in the Muggle post.
Feel free to submit at
primatewin.tumblr.com/submit
Ask me a question at
primatewin.tumblr.com/ask
(Source: luckylabs)

The black market for baby gorillas is growing, officials in the Democratic Republic of Congo said Tuesday, after a fourth incident this year led to the arrest of alleged poachers trying to sell one infant for $40,000.
This year marks “the highest number of baby gorillas confiscated from poachers in a single year on record,” the Congolese Wildlife Authority said in a statement.
“We are very concerned about a growing market for baby gorillas that is feeding a dangerous trafficking activity in rebel controlled areas,” said Emmanuel de Merode, warden of Congo’s Virunga National Park. “We are powerless to control the international trade in baby gorillas, but our rangers are doing everything they can to stamp it out on the ground.”
The park, Africa’s oldest, is home to mountain gorillas, lowland gorillas, chimpanzees, elephants and buffalo. The park has also seen fighting inside its borders and nearby during an ongoing 12-year civil war.
The four rescues so far this year, which happened between April and last Thursday, follow the one to two a year saved since 2003, when accurate records were first kept, park spokeswoman LuAnne Cadd told msnbc.com.
“If four have been caught since April, the question is how many have been missed?” she asked. “How many more are being captured and sold?”
The latest rescue came when Virunga rangers, acting on a tip, posed as potential buyers of the infant, an eastern lowland gorilla that was hidden inside a small backpack. The three suspects, who wanted $40,000, were arrested once the undercover rangers had possession of the gorilla.
“Like all the infant gorillas we see immediately after confiscation, he was extremely tense and stressed, holding his legs and arms tight up against his body, and turning his head away when he got too frightened,” said Jan Ramer, a veterinarian with the Mountain Gorilla Veterinarian Project (MGVP) who treated the gorilla afterwards. Ranger Christian Shamavu, who headed the undercover operation, said that “it’s very likely that the mother and other gorillas were killed because it’s very difficult to take a baby gorilla from its family.” De Merode said the selling price for infant gorillas can run from about $15,000 to $40,000. “No one knows for certain who the buyers are,” Cadd said. “The suspicion is possibly for zoos in places like Russia, India; or wealthy people who have personal zoos of exotic animals. “When poachers have been caught,” she added, “it is usually the supplier, or the middleman, but never the buyer.” “The rescues are usually the result of tips,” Cadd noted. “Gorillas are in the top category of protected species here in Congo and so it is illegal to kill or take one. The punishment is 1-10 years depending on whether it’s a killing, which would result in the highest sentence, or if it’s a first, second, etc., offense on taking a gorilla.” Poachers never admit to killing other gorillas to get to infants, Cadd said, “because the punishment for this is so much greater.” Rescued baby gorillas are quarantined for 30 days while MGVP veterinarians run health checks. Eastern lowland gorillas, also known as Grauer’s gorillas, usually are then sent to an orphan gorilla sanctuary near the town of Butembo. “Many of these infants are injured from ropes around their hands/feet or waist, and some are quite ill, which is not surprising, as they are generally in close contact with their human captors, extremely stressed, and with very poor nutrition,” said Ramer. For now, the baby gorilla rescued last week is getting 24-hour care because he “is too young and vulnerable to be left alone,” Virunga National Park said in a blogpost. Two caretakers “will even sleep with him at night on the same bed,” the park stated. “If you can imagine a human one-and-a-half year old, this baby is in a similar stage of life, and he needs some consistency in care in order to bond and feel safe.” Cadd said it’s unlikely the orphan would be able to return to the wild and would instead spend its life in the sanctuary. “It’s a heated topic among vets and conservationists,” she said. “Some think they should be put back and let nature take its course. Others say never when all experience shows that the babies just die. Others think that if you can create a family from the orphans with various ages, then releasing them together will work. And others worry about them carrying human diseases that they have built up immunities to back to the wild population of gorillas and creating a disaster of plague proportions.” From msnbc.com

The next time you’re struggling to relate, think like a baboon. Once again non-human primates are making monkeys out of us and our ideas about uniquely human abilities. Turns out baboons can solve analogy problems—yes, like those scary questions in the GRE Verbal Section.
Analogies are all about relationships. Cat is to kitten as dog is to puppy, rain is to dampness as sun is to heat, etc. To make an analogy, you have to understand the relationship between a pair and then relate that to another pair. Most of us use analogies all the time, and because of their link to language, we thought we were the only living beings that could do it. Not so, apparently. In a study published in Psychological Science, Franklin & Marshall’s Roger Thompson and Joël Fagot of the Laboratoire de Psychologie Cognitive gave 29 baboons their very own analogy test using visual cues. Each baboon watched a touch screen reveal two shapes with a specific relationship. The next screen presented two pairs of shapes. Baboons received a reward when they correctly identified a pair that related in the same way as the first. Not only did six of the baboons learn how to use analogies to earn a reward, but when taking the test again a year later, the baboons acquired the skill faster than the first time around. This suggests that they could remember how to make analogous connections. From audubonmagazine.org
The International Gorilla Conservation Programme (IGCP) is carrying out a population census of the endangered mountain gorillas in the Bwindi and Mgahinga national parks to establish their actual number for proper conservation plans. The IGCP country representative in Uganda, Mr Stephen Asuma, said the census started this month and is expected to end by October 20. The census was last held in 2006 where only 340 gorillas were counted and registered and the total world gorilla population then was 786. “We expect the numbers in Uganda to have increased by 26 per cent as projected in the 2006 population census. Research has established that a lot of exposure of the mountain gorillas to human beings can lead to their extinction since they have a poor immunity system that easily contracts human diseases,” Mr Asuma said. He added that there was need for funding from the Ugandan government for proper and timely advertising of the mountain gorilla tourism for more awareness locally and internationally to raise a lot of foreign exchange. Tourists currently pay $500 (Shs1.4m)to watch a mountain gorilla per hour in Uganda. From allAfrica.com
“An adult male (Sinky) play wrestles with a tiny young male, Jack. That funny grunting you hear is chimp laughter. If you watch until the end you’ll see how Sinky responds when the play gets a little too rough for Jack. This video was recorded at Chimfunshi Wildlife Orphanage Trust, a chimpanzee sanctuary in Zambia.”
A pretty long article, but really fascinating, funny, and at times, poignant, about Koko, a 40 year old Lowland Gorilla, who knows around 1000 signs and can understand 2000 words of spoken English.
Apes as Family is a dual-screen installation. The right-hand screen shows a kind of chimp soap opera - with chimps played by humans in costume - and the left-hand screen shows the reactions of captive chimps to a screening of the ape drama. It’s a great idea, although it’s not easy to gauge the chimps’ reactions.

We start off seeing a “chimp” in undergrowth. It’s an animatronic ape - a realistic-looking animal, but it didn’t convince me that it was a chimp. Would it fool any watching animal? Then, in the drama, the fake chimp encounters some humans dressed in costume-shop ape outfits, and they all start larking around. What do the watching chimps - at Edinburgh Zoo, UK - make of it?
It depends. Mostly, they seem to ignore the screen in their compound. Sometimes they sit in front of it, apparently studying the images. What’s going through their minds at these moments is impossible to tell, however around five minutes in, a watching male reveals something about his state of mind: his penis extrudes and flaps around like a tentacle. But this coincides with the arrival of a female chimp in the compound, who happens to be in season, so it seems more likely that the male was aroused by her and not the film.
Certainly none of the real chimps can be read as easily as the CGI chimps in another primate film out this year, Rise of the Planet of the Apes, but there is one dramatic moment. A male chimp, Klaus, reacts to the calls of his companion chimps in the audience and the animatronic chimp onscreen. “It’s a real deus ex machina moment,” Mayeri says. “Klaus slugs the chimp on screen. He’s known as being protective toward the females in the group, and this seemed to be a real heroic moment.”
Mayeri says she can’t imagine a more interesting project than trying to appeal to another species. She hopes that watching the movie will give people a glimpse of our commonality with chimps. “I hope that as human primates we can share the common experience of this primate drama,” she says. “And once you have developed an emotional bond with other primates, your ethics about them will come from that.” From NewScientist