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    • Aside from a few exceptions, groups consist of more adult females than adult males. Most subspecies of gorillas have groups that consist of one dominant adult male, multiple adult females and their young.
    • Once a male gorilla reaches maturity, it has three ‘options’. First, they can stay in their natal group and queue for dominance. And excellent example of this is the famous Cantsbee.
    • Gorillas are pretty unique in that both male and female gorillas may either stay in or leave their natal group. In other primate species, you can see females staying in their natal group with male dispersal, or males staying in their natal group with female dispersal.
    • Each group has its own dominance hierarchy. As previously mentioned in fact 1, there is a hierarchy among males. Females will also have a hierarchy of their own.
  1. When females become sexually mature around the age of 8, they have an important choice to make: staying in their natal group or leaving. In western gorillas, young females systematically leave the natal group and then join a solitary silverback male or another breeding group. This behaviour limits the risk of inbreeding, as the silverback in ...

  2. Mar 18, 2024 · Gorilla Group Social Structure. The Gorilla Species Survival Plan (SSP) is dedicated to providing a healthy, genetically diverse and self-sustaining population of Western Lowland gorillas in zoos across the United States. One goal of the Gorilla SSP is to maintain gorillas in species typical groupings, either as a troop consisting of a ...

  3. Jan 16, 2024 · Matsiko is an 18-year-old silverback who originates from the large and historic Susa group. He grew up in Igisha’s group after Susa’s group split in 2014 and then he became a solitary silverback in August 2019. Despite the challenges faced by the solitary life, about half of male mountain gorillas leave their natal group, as they aspire to ...

  4. IN many group-living primates, males leave their natal group and transfer to other groups far more commonly than do females (for example, refs 1–4). For only one species—the chimpanzee—is ...

    • A. H. Harcourt, K. S. Stewart, D. Fossey
    • 1976
  5. Other Gorillas live as individual males or as secluded male groups with one mature male and then a few young males. The Mountain Gorilla group range from 5 – 30 individuals and a normal group features one main Silverback, other subordinate Silverback which can be the younger brother or an adult son, one (1) or two (2) black backs, 3 – 4 females which are sexually mature, 3 – 6 juveniles ...

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  7. Gorillas are social animals that live in groups. A gorilla group usually has a harem structure of one adult male, or silverback, living together with several adult females (three to six) and their offspring. The task of the silverback is to lead and protect the group. If his leadership is successful, the females will stay in the group.

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