Behavioral responses of silverback gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) to videos.

Margaret A Maloney, Katherine A Leighty, Christopher W Kuhar, Tamara L Bettinger
Author Information
  1. Margaret A Maloney: Disney's Animal Kingdom®, Lake Buena Vista, Florida 32830, USA.

Abstract

This study examined the impact of video presentations on the behavior of 4 silverback, western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla). On each of 5 occasions, gorillas viewed 6 types of videos (blue screen, humans, an all-male or mixed-sex group engaged in low activity, and an all-male or mixed-sex group engaged in agonistic behavior). The study recorded behavioral responses and watching rates. All gorillas preferred dynamic over static videos; 3 watched videos depicting gorillas significantly more than those depicting humans. Among the gorilla videos, the gorillas clearly preferred watching the mixed-sex group engaged in agonistic behavior; yet, this did not lead to an increase in aggression or behavior indicating agitation. Further, habituation to videos depicting gorillas did not occur. This supports the effectiveness of this form of enrichment, particularly for a nonhuman animal needing to be separated temporarily due to illness, shipment quarantine, social restructuring, or exhibit modification.

MeSH Term

Animal Welfare
Animals
Behavior, Animal
Gorilla gorilla
Habituation, Psychophysiologic
Male
Video Recording

Word Cloud

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