4.2 Article

The effect of visitors on the behavior of zoo-housed western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla)

Journal

ZOO BIOLOGY
Volume 39, Issue 5, Pages 283-296

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/zoo.21552

Keywords

animal welfare; behavior; Gorilla gorilla gorilla; visitors; western lowland gorilla

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Primates, especially apes, are popular with the public, often attracting large crowds. These crowds could cause behavioral change in captive primates, whether positive, neutral, or negative. We examined the impact of visitors on the behavior of six western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla), observing the troop over 6 weeks during high season (4.5 hr/day, 35 days, May-July 2016). We used focal scan sampling to determine activity budget and enclosure usage, and focal continuous sampling to identify bouts of anxiety-related behavior (visitor-directed vigilance, self-scratching, and aggression). Both daily zoo-entry numbers (V-GATE) and instantaneous crowds at the exhibit (V-DENSITY) were measured. Overall, V(GATE)had little effect across behaviors. However, consistent with the more acute time frame of measurement, V(DENSITY)was a better predictor of behavior; at high crowd volumes, we observed significant group-level changes in activity budget (increased inactivity, increased locomotion, and decreased environment-related behaviors), increase in some anxiety-related behaviors, and decreased enclosure usage. Although contributing similar effects, it could not be determined if crowd numbers, composition, or noise most affected the troop, nor any chronic effects of exposure to large crowds. Nevertheless, our findings suggest that measures to minimize the impacts of large crowds at the exhibit would be beneficial. Furthermore, we highlight potential discrepancies between common methods for measuring visitor numbers: V(GATE)is less sensitive to detecting visitor effects on behavioral indices than V-DENSITY. Future studies should appropriately match the biological time frame of welfare indicators and visitor measures used to ensure the reliability of findings.

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