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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNFemale Gorillas Form Ties That Bind, Helping Them Join New Social GroupsA new study finds that when female mountain gorillas move to a new crowd, they look for females they’ve already met ...
When female gorillas leave one social group and join another, they tend to seek out groups with other females that they've lived with in the past, showing the power of long-term relationships.
With only about 1,000 left in the wild, according to the World Wildlife Fund and the International Gorilla Conservation ...
In Rwanda's Volcanoes National Park, the last thousand endangered mountain gorillas live in the wild. Tourism for the ...
Robin Roberts travels to Rwanda's Volcanoes National Park, where the last thousand endangered mountain gorillas live in the ...
Female mountain gorillas are showing scientists how important friendship can be in the animal world.A long-term study from ...
A 20-year study on mountain gorillas reveals that female gorillas form lasting emotional ties with each other.
Female gorillas do not change groups randomly. They avoid the males they grew up with, thus preventing inbreeding, according ...
Research shaped by 20 years of data shows the key traits female gorillas look for when seeking a new social group and what ...
A new study by scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig and the University of Turku ...
Animal lovers will remember The Cheyenne Mountain Zoo (CMZoo) welcomed the first gorilla born at the zoo in almost 13 years ...
The "GMA" co-anchor got a closer look at mountain gorillas in their natural habitat. There are only about a thousand still in ...
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