What are gorillas?
Gorillas are largest of the great apes, the group that includes chimpanzees and orang-utans. Genetically, humans, chimps and gorillas are very closely related-we share 97% of the same genes with gorillas, and 98% with chimp! A scientist from another plant would not hesitate to classify us all in the same genes. Human scientist place us and the apes in the super family Hominoidea within the order primates. Other primates include monkeys, lemurs and bushbabies. Apes differ from monkeys in being larger, having bigger brains and no tails.
The gorillas in Bwindi and Mgahinga are mountain gorillas, the rarest of the three sub species of gorillas. All gorillas occur exclusively in the dense forest of the west and central Africa. Mountain gorillas are found only in the Virunga Volcanoes and Bwindi.

Our changing perception of gorillas
African people have long known that gorillas lived in the forests. To the rest of the world, however, gorillas were for centuries mysterious and largely unknown.
The stories brought home by early European explorers were greatly exaggerated descriptions of ferocious, man like beasts that bore little resemblance to the actual animals. The name “gorilla” may originate from one such story. Over 2000 years ago, an explorer named Hanno from the North African city of Carthage encountered apes on the coast of West Africa. He described a wild battle where several of his men were wounded and scratched trying to capture live specimens. In his language gorilla meant, “the scratcher” and while the apes he met were probably chimpanzees, the name has remained with gorillas throughout the centuries. The gorilla was first formally described as a species by scientist in 1847.
Three subspecies of gorilla are recognized, the Western lowland gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla), the eastern lowland gorilla (G. g. graueri), the mountain gorilla (G. g. beringei). The mountain gorilla is the rarest of all the apes.
It is slightly larger than the lowland gorillas (although the largest wild specimen on record was an eastern lowland gorilla from the Kahuzi-Biega region in congo). Mountain gorillas were only ‘discovered’ by the scientific community in the 20th century. Most gorillas collected and described previously were of the more common western lowland variety. Rumours of gorillas living in the mountains of central Africa weren’t confirmed until two animals were shot on the slopes of Mt. Sabinyo in 1902. The hunter was a German army officer named Oscur von Beringe, whose name was later attached to the subspecies beringei.




