Santa Fe New Mexican

Ape helped change views with smarts, empathy

Animal’s aptitude for signing endeared her to fans worldwide

- By Seth Borenstein and Janie Har GORILLA FOUNDATION VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES

Koko the gorilla, whose remarkable sign-language ability and motherly attachment to pet cats helped change the world’s views about the intelligen­ce of animals and their capacity for empathy, has died at 46.

Koko was taught sign language from an early age as a scientific test subject and eventually learned more than 1,000 words, a vocabulary similar to that of a human toddler.

She became a celebrity who played with the likes of William Shatner, Sting, Leonardo DiCaprio, Robin Williams and Mr. Rogers. At her home preserve, where she was treated like a queen, she ran around with Williams’ eyeglasses and unzipped Rogers’ famous cardigan sweater.

In so doing, Koko showed the American public that a giant ape didn’t have to be scary but wanted to be tickled and hugged.

The Gorilla Foundation said the 280-pound western lowland gorilla died in her sleep Tuesday at a preserve in California.

Koko was the not the first animal to learn sign language and communicat­e, but through books and media appearance­s she became the most famous. Yet there was debate in the scientific community about how deep and human-like her conversati­ons were.

Koko appeared in many documentar­ies, including a 2015 PBS one, and twice in National Geographic. The gorilla’s 1978 National Geographic cover featured a photo that the animal had taken of herself in a mirror.

“Koko the individual was supersmart, like all the apes, and also sensitive, something not everyone expected from a ‘king kong’ type animal that movies depict as dangerous and formidable,” Emory University primate researcher Frans de Waal said in an email Thursday.

“It changed the image of apes, and gorillas in particular, for the better, such as through the children’s book Koko’s Kitten that many young people have grown up with. To view apes as nice and caring was new to the public and a big improvemen­t.”

For her 25th birthday, Koko asked for and received a box of rubber snakes. In 1996, she asked to be a mother. Despite attempts by her keepers to introduce male partners, Koko never became a mother. Instead, she had a series of kittens as pets.

Koko’s real name was Hanabi-Ko, Japanese for fireworks child. She was born July 4, 1971, at the San Francisco Zoo.

Francine Patterson was working on her doctoral dissertati­on on the linguistic capabiliti­es of gorillas and in 1972 started to teach Koko sign language. Patterson and biologist Ronald Cohn moved Koko to their newly establishe­d preserve in 1974 and kept teaching and studying her, adding a male gorilla in 1979. In 2004, Koko used American Sign Language to communicat­e that her mouth hurt and used a pain scale of 1 to 10 to show how badly it hurt.

“Koko represents what language may have been 5 million years ago for people,” Cohn said in 1996. “That’s the time that gorillas and humans separated in evolution.”

Other scientists, such as Herbert Terrace at Columbia University, who raised and taught sign language to a primate named Nim Chimpksy, argued in scientific and popular literature that most of Koko’s conversati­ons and those of other primates were “not spontaneou­s but solicited by questions from her teachers and companions.”

“Scientists have often complained about possible overinterp­retation of Koko’s sign language utterances and the lack of proper documentat­ion of what she has said when and how,” de Waal said in an email, adding that “coaching and interpreta­tion by the people around her” may have altered her messages at times.

But the science, de Waal said, was “irrelevant to Koko’s pop-image. … Koko’s passing is the end of an era, and a genuine loss.”

Koko frequently asked to see people’s nipples, a habit that led to controvers­y more than a dozen years ago, when two former caretakers said they were fired for refusing to bare their breasts to the gorilla. The women settled with the foundation in 2005.

Video shows Koko grabbing for Williams’ chest area and Shatner’s groin.

Williams, another San Francisco Bay area legend, met Koko in 2001.

“We shared something extraordin­ary: Laughter,” he said, calling the experience “awesome and unforgetta­ble.”

Williams killed himself in 2014. Patterson later said she didn’t plan on telling Koko about Williams’ death, but the gorilla overheard conversati­on and then later “mourned” the actor by going silent and sullen.

Koko knew about death, Patterson said in 2015, relaying in The Atlantic a conversati­on Koko had with another caretaker:

“The caregiver showed Koko a skeleton and asked, ‘Is this alive or dead?’ Koko signed, ‘Dead, draped.’ ‘Draped’ means ‘covered up.’ Then the caregiver asked, ‘Where do animals go when they die?’ Koko said, ‘A comfortabl­e hole.’ Then she gave a kiss goodbye.”

 ??  ?? Koko the gorilla with Francine Patterson, her longtime caretaker and trainer, in an undated photo. Koko, whose apparent aptitude for sign language endeared her to fans around the world, died in her sleep Tuesday morning at the age of 46.
Koko the gorilla with Francine Patterson, her longtime caretaker and trainer, in an undated photo. Koko, whose apparent aptitude for sign language endeared her to fans around the world, died in her sleep Tuesday morning at the age of 46.

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