The Denver Post

Survey finds more gorillas than previously believed

- By Douglas Main

The largest-ever survey of two primate population­s in Africa found vastly more western lowland gorillas, as well as higher numbers of central chimpanzee­s, than were previously believed to exist. But that hopeful finding is imperiled because of the gorillas’ alarming rate of decline, according to a study.

Western lowland gorillas are the primary and most widespread subspecies of gorilla, and central chimpanzee­s are the second-most populous chimp, outnumbere­d only by the eastern chimpanzee. Both species are found mainly in the Congo and Gabon.

The study, published Wednesday in the journal Science Advances, estimates that there were 361,900 gorillas and 128,700 chimpanzee­s as of 2013. That’s about one-third more gorillas and one-tenth more chimpanzee­s than previous surveys estimated, though those calculatio­ns were done differentl­y and were not designed to count the animals across their entire range.

That is the good news. Now the bad: Researcher­s found that gorilla population­s are dropping faster than they believed, at a rate of nearly 3 percent per year, said Fiona Maisels, a conservati­on scientist with the Wildlife Conservati­on Society and the University of Stirling in Scotland. At this rate, half of the world’s gorillas could be gone by about 2040, she said.

“It’s nice to know there are more, but it was kind of shocking to see that the gorillas are declining as much as we calculated,” she said.

This means that even when taking a larger population into account, western lowland gorillas are correctly classified as “critically endangered” by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN), said Russell Mittermeie­r, chair of the society’s primate specialist group. Chimpanzee­s are listed as endangered.

The gorilla numbers are probably already lower than reported. The most recent data point incorporat­ed into the study is five years old, Maisels noted, because of the enormous amount of informatio­n that had to be gathered and analyzed.

“If the decline has gone on at the same speed, by 2020, we will have lost another 60,000 gorillas,” she said.

What’s more, the study said, about 80 percent of both animals are found outside protected areas, which means they could be more vulnerable than previously assumed.

To come up with the new estimate, a team of more than 50 scientists and conservati­onists analyzed and gathered a decade’s worth of data from the countries where the two animals are found: Congo, Gabon, Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Equatorial Guinea and Angola. The work included surveys in an area the size of Washington state.

Researcher­s hailed from a dozen organizati­ons, including the World Wide Fund for Nature, the Jane Goodall Institute and the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species, or CITES. Scientists collective­ly spent 61,000 days in the field gathering data, the Wildlife Conservati­on Society said in a statement.

The researcher­s developed a computer model to predict densities of gorillas and chimps outside the areas directly surveyed, over the whole of their Texas-size range.

Scientists also conducted surveys by walking straight lines, or transects, in 59 areas of tropical forest in the region, known as Western Equatorial Africa. Along these lines, they would count gorilla and chimpanzee nests, which the animals make each night for sleeping. The number and condition of these resting places were key building blocks of the final population estimates, Maisels said.

Both animals are threatened by hunting and the bushmeat trade, as well as logging, forest degradatio­n and agricultur­al expansion. The Ebola virus, which affects both animals, has also taken a toll.

“We need far better management of existing parks and reserves, and we need to have more protected areas, since large portions of chimp and gorilla population­s occur outside” them, said Mittermeie­r, who is the chief conservati­on officer for Global Wildlife Conservati­on and was not involved in the study.

Gorillas and chimps can survive in areas that are managed responsibl­y, said Maisels, who said she would like to see stronger enforcemen­t of laws and hunting prohibitio­ns from logging companies within areas they manage. But laws against illegal logging and hunting are not always observed, and the roads that loggers build through forests can allow poachers to more easily access and kill wildlife within.

To keep the animals around, “we have to make sure the protected areas are truly protected,” Maisels said.

One obvious reason to save gorillas and chimps is that they are huge draws for ecotourism, a growing source of revenue throughout the area. They also help keep forests healthy, including by spreading seeds. Their forest habitats hold massive stores of carbon, which has its own economic value, Mittermeie­r said.

But maintainin­g robust wild population­s is about more than that, Maisels argued.

“They’re our nearest relative,” she said. “It’s a kind of moral responsibi­lity.”

 ?? Forrest Hogg, Wildlife Conservati­on Society ?? A western lowland gorilla sits in a rain forest in the Republic of Congo.
Forrest Hogg, Wildlife Conservati­on Society A western lowland gorilla sits in a rain forest in the Republic of Congo.

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