The Welland Tribune

Gorilla walks like human to keep his hands clean

- AMY B. WANG

A couple of dozen steps. Two fistfuls of tomatoes. A perfectly upright posture.

That was all it took to launch Louis, an 18-year-old male western lowland gorilla at the Philadelph­ia Zoo, to viral fame.

It started in early March, when zookeepers filmed Louis standing on two legs, like a human, strutting from one side of his enclosure to another. In his hands, he clutched a few small, red-orange blobs.

They were tomatoes, the zoo explained later. A special treat for him.

In the caption for the eight-second video (titled “Snacking on the Run”), the zoo explained that, although it isn’t common for gorillas to walk on two legs, Louis had made a habit out of doing so regularly.

“He can often be seen walking bipedally when his hands are full of snacks or when the ground is muddy (so he doesn’t get his hands dirty)!” the zoo wrote.

In a post-Harambe world, of course, people have thoughts whenever a western lowland gorilla goes viral. Video of Louis’s brief stroll quickly spread across the internet, and the public questions flowed from there: Did Louis have obsessive-compulsive disorder? Was there something secretly wrong with his two front legs?

Reactions alternated between charmed (”I also walk upright when my hands are full of snack,” one Facebook commenter wrote) and oddly accusatory (”APE-ING AROUND: This gorilla strolls around like a HUMAN to avoid getting his hands — or his food — dirty,” blared the Sun, a British tabloid).

The reality, zookeepers say, is not so dramatic, but no less endearing.

Louis is “fully healthy, 470 pounds of solid muscle” and his “hands and feet and legs work very well,” said Michael Stern, curator of primates and small mammals at the Philadelph­ia Zoo.

He simply is exhibiting behaviour that, although “pretty rare,” does manifest from time to time in gorillas.

“They will walk upright when they’re playing with each other or they’re displaying to try to look big and strong ... or to wade into a swamp,” Stern told The Washington Post.

The difference is that, while other gorillas might walk upright “for a few seconds or a few steps,” Louis can mosey around on his hind legs for an extended period — and, in fact, seems to prefer to, especially when it comes to protecting his snacks.

“He actually does it more often than you might think,” Stern said. “It depends on the situation. If the ground is really muddy, he will do it more often. If he’s getting fed some treats, like tomatoes, that might squish more, then he tends to walk upright with things like that.”

Since the zoo posted the video of Louis, it has been viewed and shared tens of thousands of times. Stern said there have since been people who have visited the zoo after watching the video, specifical­ly hoping to get a glimpse of Louis walking upright — and, to their delight, he has obliged.

Stern said he can understand why the video has gone viral but hopes the awareness extends beyond the eight-second clip. Since 2007, the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature has listed the western lowland gorilla as “critically endangered.”

“All the gorillas have their different personalit­ies,” Stern said. “We really hope that by getting to know him that way, hopefully that gets more people’s hearts and minds thinking about what they can do to help protect a critical endangered species.”

 ?? PHILADELPH­IA ZOO FACEBOOK ?? Louis, a gorilla at the Philadelph­ia Zoo, can be seen walking bipedally with snacks in his hands in this screen capture from a video posted to the zoos Facebook page.
PHILADELPH­IA ZOO FACEBOOK Louis, a gorilla at the Philadelph­ia Zoo, can be seen walking bipedally with snacks in his hands in this screen capture from a video posted to the zoos Facebook page.

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