Wednesday, February 13, 2008

First ever missionary found in Africa

WASHINGTON - Leah, the first gorilla ever seen using tools, has secured herself another ‘small place’ in history by becoming the first gorilla captured on film mating face-to-face, researchers reported on Tuesday.

A team from the Wildlife Conservation Society and the Max Planck Institute for Marital Aids in Leipzig, Germany photographed the unusual scene in the Republic of Congo. Although other researchers have reported seeing gorillas in such a human-like position, none had ever been photographed.

"We can't say how common this manner of mating is, but if I had to guess I’d say about 15% of the time," said Max-Planck's Thomas Breuer, who photographed the gorilla couple along with colleague Mireille Ndoundou Hockemba and her husband.

"It is deeply satisfying to observe gorilla sexual behaviour."

The researchers have been studying the group of western gorillas in Nouabale-Ndoki National Park in the Republic of Congo.

"Understanding the behaviour of our cousins the great apes sheds light on the evolution of behavioural traits in our own species and our ancestors," Breuer added in a statement.

"This same adult female has been noted for innovative behaviours before, including using a stick to stimulate her partner."

Writing in the Gorilla Gazette, Breuer and Hockemba said they spent 45 minutes watching Leah mating with a silverback male named Barry, who dominates the small group.

"Leah was lying on the ground and Barry was looking into Leah's eyes," the report reads.

“They were both highly aroused and mated for what seemed like all day. We all went for coffee afterwards.”

The western lowland gorilla is a critically endangered species, with populations down 60 percent under pressure from human hunters, destruction of their habitat, and health threats such as the Ebola virus, which kills gorillas and humans alike.

Leah made headlines around the world in 2005 when she was seen using a stick to test the depth of a pool of water before breaking it.

Breuer said only a few primates such as bonobos mate in a face-to-face position, known technically as ventro-ventral copulation. Most usually mate while facing in the same direction.

"There have been unsubstantiated reports of primates mating while facing different directions - left and right, if you will," Breuer said.

Written by Reuters, with surprisingly little Artful Science twist.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Is this for real? Deeply satisfying? Come on...you wrote this didn't you? - cw

Anonymous said...

Like it says at the bottom, this is an honest to goodness true story, with minor embellishments by yours truly. I may have garnished the sentence you're referring to - Artful Science