Louisville
Zoo welcomes
new female gorilla
(EDITOR’S ADVISORY: More photos are
available upon request. Please call prior to coverage to insure
Kweli is out and able to be viewed.)
Louisville Zoo’s award-winning Gorilla
Forest recently became home to 25-year-old female gorilla Kweli
(pronounced “quay lee”), bringing the total number of gorillas
to 12.
Kweli, who was born at the Cincinnati
Zoo, is mother to 11-year-old blackback Kicho who also resides
in Louisville Zoo’s Gorilla Forest. She also has one offspring
at the Pittsburgh Zoo and one at Omaha’s Henry Doorly Zoo.
“Kweli was an excellent mother to her
three offspring,” Gorilla Forest Supervisor Roby Elsner said.
“She was also a high-ranking and well-socialized female in
Cincinnati, which is why the Gorilla Species Survival Plan (SSP)
recommended she come to Louisville.”
Elsner said the goal is to utilize
Kweli’s social skills and background so she can bond with adult
female gorillas Mia Moja, 19, and Paki, 19, for their future
introduction to young silverback Mshindi, 20.
“Testosterone-charged males like
Mshindi who are in their prime at this age often need to be
introduced to three or more females who can effectively act as a
cohesive unit to handle a silverback’s rambunctiousness,” Elsner
said.
Kweli is currently housed with Mia Moja,
Paki and Timmy, a 49-year-old silverback who is the leader of
the group. Timmy is currently the oldest male gorilla in North
America.
“Females have historically been
attracted to and comfortable with Timmy, and he traditionally
readily accepts them into his group,” Elsner said. “Under these
conditions, it is anticipated that these three females can form
a very strong bond to help them with their future introduction
to Mshindi, a much less laid back silverback.”
Thus far the strategy has worked and
Kweli and Mia Moja have formed an innate connection. Kweli and
Timmy have good rapport as well. Paki, who is typically
stand-offish to newcomers, has recently started to accept Kweli
into the group.
Visitors can recognize Kweli by her
short, pudgy stature and a slightly hanging lower lip that
reveals its inner pink lining. She is often seen near the
assured Timmy as well as her new friend Mia Moja.
“While Kweli’s name means ‘truth’ in
the Swahili,” Elsner said, “the real ‘truth’ is that we are
thankful Kweli’s social skills will benefit not only her current
group and the one planned for the future (whenever it is ready
to be formed), but also the Zoo’s overall gorilla program.”
NOTE: In Gorilla Forest, the animals
rotate on a daily basis so Kweli will not always be visible.
For more information on the other 11
gorillas in Gorilla Forest, visit
www.louisvillezoo.org/collection/exhibits/gforest/gf-meet.htm.
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The Louisville Zoo, a non-profit
organization and state zoo of Kentucky, is dedicated to
bettering the bond between people and our
planet by providing excellent care for animals, a great
experience for visitors, and leadership in scientific
research and conservation education. The Zoo is accredited by
the American Association of Museums (AAM) and by the Association
of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA).
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