Boston Herald

Gorilla counts on the decline

But study finds more than 100,000 beyond its estimates

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WASHINGTON — A first-ofits-kind intensive count of western Africa gorillas found far more of the apes than conservati­onists previously thought.

Maybe not for long: The same study found a 19 percent plunge in that gorilla population in just eight years.

Researcher­s spent a decade trudging through an area of forest that’s about the size of the state of Washington — or Ireland and Scotland combined — looking for lowland gorillas, chimpanzee­s and nests in what scientists said is the most accurate count for the apes in this primary region where they live, according to a study in yesterday’s journal Science Advances.

They put the 2013 population at 362,000 gorillas.

That’s considerab­ly more than the 150,000-to-250,000 estimate from the organizati­on that determines how endangered species are, the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature.

But it’s also significan­tly less than the 2005 assessment of almost 450,000 gorillas from the same research team.

The population still qualifies for the IUCN critically endangered red list because the animals are on pace to lose more than 80 percent of their population in three gorilla generation­s, which is a key threshold, said study author Fiona Maisels of the Wildlife Conservati­on Society and the University of Stirling in Scotland.

At the current rate, 80 percent or more of the gorillas will be gone by end of the century, said University of Illinois primate expert Paul Garber, who wasn’t part of the study but praised it. He said in the five years since the 2013 count, the loss has likely accelerate­d.

“That is a doomsday scenario, and we need to reverse this immediatel­y,” Garber said in an email.

Gorillas are hunted as food, and Maisels blames that for much of the population drop. Four out of five gorillas live in an area not protected from hunting, the paper found. Maisels also said forest loss could be huge in the future.

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY ZANNE LABUSCHAGN­E/WILDLIFE CONSERVATI­ON SOCIETY VIA AP ?? MAJESTIC: Buka, a silverback gorilla, is shown in a park in this undated photo from the Republic of Congo. Researcher­s now estimate that there are more than 360,000 lowland gorillas in the wild in Western Africa, approximat­ely one-third higher than...
FILE PHOTO BY ZANNE LABUSCHAGN­E/WILDLIFE CONSERVATI­ON SOCIETY VIA AP MAJESTIC: Buka, a silverback gorilla, is shown in a park in this undated photo from the Republic of Congo. Researcher­s now estimate that there are more than 360,000 lowland gorillas in the wild in Western Africa, approximat­ely one-third higher than...

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