The Gorilla Rehabilitation and Conservation Education Center is located near the Tayna Nature Reserve in the Republic of Congo. Watch live and learn more about the gorillas.
All species (and subspecies) of gorilla are listed as endangered or critically endangered on the IUCN Red List.
Now, over 100,000 western lowland gorillas are thought to exist in the wild, with 4,000 in zoos, thanks to conservation;
eastern lowland gorillas have a population of under 5,000 in the wild and 24 in zoos.
In nature, gorillas live in the equatorial forests of western and central Africa, mountain gorillas - on the slopes of the volcanic mountains of Virunga, covered with forest. They keep in small groups, consisting of a male leader, several females and their cubs (from 5 to 30 individuals in total).
The gorilla's diet is based on plant foods. Among the plants used, one can distinguish wild celery, bedstraw, nettles, bamboo shoots, blue pygeum fruits. Fruits and nuts are an addition to the main diet, while animal foods.
Gorillas also use various mineral supplements in their diet: they eat, for example, some types of clay, thus compensating for the lack of salt in food. Gorillas hardly have to drink: juicy greens already have enough moisture. Reservoirs
and water in general are avoided whenever possible, and rain is disliked.