Gorilla Longevity Trends

TheGytrash

Well-Known Member
I was recently reading an article about the longest-lived gorillas in history and I noticed an interesting trend. A large number of them were from the same zoos. Of the list of 48 gorillas to reach the age of 50 or more, here they are grouped by zoo (including animals from USA only, though it is worth noting that several international zoos have multiple gorillas over 50).

Zoo Atlanta (4)
Ozoum/ Ozzie (1.0, 61, died in 2022)
Choomba (0.1, 59, died in 2022)
Shamba (0.1, 58, died in 2017)
Ivan (1.0, 50, died in 2012)

Louisville Zoo (3)
Helen (0.1, 64, died in 2022)
Timmy (1.0, 52, died in 2011)
Demba (0.1, 50, died in 2021)

Columbus Zoo (2)
Colo (0.1, 60, died 2017)
Pongi (0.1, 51, died 2014)* (I've also seen her listed as 49 years old elsewhere)

Gladys Porter Zoo (2)
Lamydoc (1.0, 60, died 2022)
Katanga (0.1, 52, died 2015)

Woodland Park Zoo (2)
Pete (1.0, 51, died 2018)
Amanda (0.1, 50, died 2020)

San Diego Safari Park (2)
Winston (1.0, 52, still alive)
Vila (0,1, 61, died in 2018)

Fort Worth Zoo* (2*)
Note: Only Ramses was included on the list online, which was updated last month, but I've found other sources saying Amani is 50 years old.
Ramses I (52, still alive)
Amani (50, still alive)

Zoos With One Long-Lived Gorilla (8)
Brookfield Zoo (1.0)
Cincinnati Zoo (0.1)
Dallas Zoo (0.1)
Hogle Zoo (0.1)
Little Rock Zoo (0.1)
Oklahoma City Zoo (0.1)
Pittsburgh Zoo (0.1)
Philadelphia Zoo (1.0)

Zoos currently exhibiting gorillas with zero animals to live over 50 (30)
ABQ BIoPark
Audubon Zoo
Bronx Zoo
Buffalo Zoo
Busch Gardens Tampa
Cheyenne Mountain Zoo
Cleveland Metroparks Zoo
Como Park Zoo
Denver Zoo
Detroit Zoo
Disney's Animal Kingdom (listed as having a 52-year-old gorilla, but it sounds like she died in 2017 and the zoo didn't announce it)
Franklin Park Zoo (listed as having a 50-year-old, but I believe that Gigi was mixed up with a different Gigi from Germany)
Houston Zoo (they do currently have a 49-year-old gorilla, I believe! Hopefully soon to join the list!)
Jacksonville Zoo
Kansas City Zoo
Lincoln Park Zoo
Los Angeles Zoo
Memphis Zoo
Milwaukee County Zoo
North Carolina Zoo
Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo
Riverbanks Zoo
St. Louis Zoo
San Francisco Zoo
Santa Barbara Zoo
Sedgwick County Zoo
Smithsonian's National Zoo
Toledo Zoo
Zoo Knoxville
Zoo Miami

I find it interesting to note that out of 15 zoos that have had a gorilla live to over 50, 7 of them (nearly half) have been home to more than one. With so many excellent zoos never housing a gorilla who lived to over age 50, these clumps of elderly gorillas really stand out. Zoo Atlanta and Louisville seem particularly noteworthy for their animals' longevity.

Fort Worth is also the only zoo on the list to CURRENTLY house multiple gorillas over 50. The San Diego Safari Park also houses one living elderly gorilla, having held a previous one in the past.

Why do we think some of these zoos have multiple gorillas who live so long? Is it genetics of related gorillas? Does it have to do with how/where they spent their younger years? Is it purely standard of care? What kinds of medical conditions did these gorillas live with? (I know heart disease is a VERY common cause of death for great apes and that primate biscuits can contribute to it.) Did living with other elderly gorillas help them thrive? Here are a few things I've discovered, but I'd also love to hear your thoughts.

General notes
* Most of the gorillas who've lived over age 50 who lived in the same zoo as one another passed away within the last 5 years. With so many more gorillas living into their 50's now than in the past, this may indicate a higher general standard of care.
* Of the zoos with multiple older gorillas, 9 were 0.1 and 6 were 1.0. Of the zoos with single gorillas, 8 were 0.1 and only 2 were 1.0.
* All 4 of Zoo Atlanta's elderly gorillas were wild-born. Of the rest, 14 were wild, 6 captive, and I can't find anything on Pete at Woodland Park.

Are any of these gorillas related?
* Ramses I at the Fort Worth Zoo and Samantha at Cincinnati Zoo were siblings, and their sister Gigi lived to be 47 (though she was erroneously listed as being 50 elsewhere). This does seem potentially significant to me. None of the others seem to be related, as far as I can tell.

Zoos these gorillas lived at (but didn't die at)
*Timmy spent 25 years at the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo and around 20 years at the Bronx Zoo before retiring to Louisville.
*Before moving to Zoo Atlanta, Ivan famously spent many years in a small cage in a shopping mall. So you likely can't attribute his excellent longevity to spectacular care earlier in life.
*Ozoum, Choomba, and Shamba at Atlanta all spent at least 20 years at the Yerkes Primate Center before moving to Atlanta.
*Lamydoc spent 13 years in Pittsburgh
* Ramses and Amani spent roughly 20 years at the Cincinnati Zoo
* Trudy from Little Rock spent over 20 years at the St. Louis Zoo
* Gorgeous from Hogle Zoo lived at the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo for 30+ years

What did the longest-lived gorillas die of?
* Most died of vaguely-defined complications of old age/quality of life, which is to be expected
* Demba, Timmy, Colo, and Samantha, died or were euthanized due to heart disease (Pongi could also be included here). This is probably the most common cause of death besides vague decline of health, but is actually less common than I expected among this population.
* Ivan and Pongi died under general anesthetic, which is also common
* While Ozoum's cause of death wasn't revealed (he was ill and not eating or drinking before death), he had survived COVID-19 several months before which may have weakened him as he was extremely elderly
* Katanga had cancer. Jenny had an inoperable stomach tumor
* Ramar at Brookfield was euthanized due to diminished bowel function/ blockage
* Massa at Philadelphia Zoo died of a stroke.
* While Lamydoc was euthanized due to 'age-related' complications, these did include both heart disease and symptoms of dementia (which I didn't know was a thing for gorillas)
*Of the living elderly gorillas, Winston at San Diego Safari Park is known to have heart disease.

Does anyone else have any thoughts or reflections or patterns they'd like to share?
 
Does anyone else have any thoughts or reflections or patterns they'd like to share?

My main thought is that if you are trying to come up with meaningful answers for the questions you pose regarding the factors which contribute to gorilla longevity, deliberately choosing an incomplete data set by omitting those examples from outside the USA - which include the longest-lived gorilla in history, and the longest-lived wild individual - is likely to have an impact on the quality and reliability of these answers. Conclusions *can* be drawn, of course.

Franklin Park Zoo (listed as having a 50-year-old, but I believe that Gigi was mixed up with a different Gigi from Germany)

and their sister Gigi lived to be 47 (though she was erroneously listed as being 50 elsewhere).

Your source for this being?

Disney's Animal Kingdom (listed as having a 52-year-old gorilla, but it sounds like she died in 2017 and the zoo didn't announce it)

And this?
 
And this?
While this of course does not answer your question, DAK rarely talks about individual animals as they prefer to avoid the scrutiny if one dies unexpectedly - there's a lot more eyes on them, after all, than pretty much any other zoo in the world. So if a gorilla there did die, the public likely would not be informed.
 
It may be worth noting, that Helen at Louisville, lived a lot of her life at Lincoln Park, before moving in the early 2000s. Many of Lincoln Park Zoo's mid aged and blackback individuals were sent out in 2002 for the demolition of the old ape house, with the older individuals not being brought back from their loans.
 
My main thought is that if you are trying to come up with meaningful answers for the questions you pose regarding the factors which contribute to gorilla longevity, deliberately choosing an incomplete data set by omitting those examples from outside the USA - which include the longest-lived gorilla in history, and the longest-lived wild individual - is likely to have an impact on the quality and reliability of these answers. Conclusions *can* be drawn, of course.

I only looked at the US population because I was interested in analyzing trends within the US population specifically. The animals within this population move around between American zoos and breed with one another and generally follow AZA standards of care. I also only speak English and some German, so I wouldn't be able to check information as thoroughly for gorillas in countries where neither language is spoken.

As for my source for the Gigi information? On the Wikipedia article for longest-lived gorillas, it listed a Gigi at the Franklin Park Zoo as having been born in 1959 and dying in 2009, making her 50. But when I looked up "Gigi Franklin Park Zoo," I got multiple articles about a gorilla who died in 2019 at age 47.

Curious where the other stats came from, I googled "Gigi gorilla died 2009" and found a German news article about a gorilla named Gigi who died in 2009 at the Berlin Zoo. In fact, I remember seeing a gorilla named Gigi at the Berlin Zoo as a kid. So I think that was where the confusion happened. And that's why I fact-checked the animals listed on Wikipedia (and found an additional gorilla over 50 not listed there).

My source about Animal Kingdom's Benga is her entry from Gorillas Land. It lists her under 'former population' and says she died in 2017. She's not listed under the Western Lowland Gorillas population thread in the North America section here on Zoochat. I also can't find any mentions of her in news articles since then or any new photos of her. The Disney parks blog also states that Gino is the oldest gorilla at Disney's Animal Kingdom at age 42.
 
You missed the Houston Zoo for one long lived individual. They had the last Eastern Lowland Gorilla in the U.S, Mac, who was 52 years old when he died in 2004.
 
You missed the Houston Zoo for one long lived individual. They had the last Eastern Lowland Gorilla in the U.S, Mac, who was 52 years old when he died in 2004.

Great point. I was only looking at Western Lowland Gorillas-- totally forgot there were ever Easterns in the USA!

Then if Binti currently at the Houston Zoo turns 50 later this year, the Houston Zoo will be yet another zoo to have 2 or more gorillas reach the age!
 
I'm amazed that the Bronx gorilla program hasn't had an animal over 50. With Zoo Atlanta they have the largest number of animals and amazing vet history to support those animals.
Heart disease has been a huge issue in apes, mostly males I think. Google Great Ape Heart Project if this link doesn't work. (no title)
 
Seeing your list contains only around 25 gorillas, I'm very certain that there wouldn't be any significant correlation between the zoo and gorilla longevity. Generally speaking, it seems like the zoos with gorillas who were especially long lived were primarily zoos that have had a large number of gorillas over a long period of time. Some of these zoos, for instance Buffalo Zoo, Franklin Park Zoo, and Disney's Animal Kingdom, haven't even kept gorillas for a total of fifty years, making it much less likely to have had long-lived gorillas than institutions that have held large numbers of gorillas over a long period of time.

Furthermore, looking at only the longest living of individuals may not be the best way to analyze longevity. Even with the best care possible, most animals won't reach the absolute maximum possible due to genetics, underlying conditions, etc.

The one longevity trend I am aware of is that in female gorillas, there is a correlation between the age of menopause and the age of death, with females who reach menopause earlier typically dying at a younger age than females who reach menopause later. (Source: What necropsy reports can tell us about menopausal and age-related changes in Western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) | Journal of Zoo and Aquarium Research). There is a wide range of age that menopause takes place in gorillas (ranging between late 30's and early 50's), so it is interesting that menopause appears to be correlated with longevity.

I'm amazed that the Bronx gorilla program hasn't had an animal over 50.
That is the most glaring zoo there to not have a 50-year old gorilla, as they have had a very large number of gorillas over a long number of years. It does appear they have had a few gorillas that have been close over the years, so it's likely a matter of luck and the fact this data is basically just statistical fluff.
 
I also think regarding Bronx that they seem to sometimes move older gorillas elsewhere to 'retire.' For instance, Timmy lived there for like 20 years and only 'retired' to Louisville after he was already pretty old. It seems like Louisville may have functioned like a bit of a retirement home for both him and Helen around the same time-- she transferred there a couple years earlier.
 
I know this is an old thread, but you asked about Pete at Woodland Park Zoo. He was wild born.
Also, Binti at Houston didn't quite make it to 50, may she rest in peace.
 
I was recently reading an article about the longest-lived gorillas in history and I noticed an interesting trend. A large number of them were from the same zoos. Of the list of 48 gorillas to reach the age of 50 or more, here they are grouped by zoo (including animals from USA only, though it is worth noting that several international zoos have multiple gorillas over 50).

Zoo Atlanta (4)
Ozoum/ Ozzie (1.0, 61, died in 2022)
Choomba (0.1, 59, died in 2022)
Shamba (0.1, 58, died in 2017)
Ivan (1.0, 50, died in 2012)

Louisville Zoo (3)
Helen (0.1, 64, died in 2022)
Timmy (1.0, 52, died in 2011)
Demba (0.1, 50, died in 2021)

Columbus Zoo (2)
Colo (0.1, 60, died 2017)
Pongi (0.1, 51, died 2014)* (I've also seen her listed as 49 years old elsewhere)

Gladys Porter Zoo (2)
Lamydoc (1.0, 60, died 2022)
Katanga (0.1, 52, died 2015)

Woodland Park Zoo (2)
Pete (1.0, 51, died 2018)
Amanda (0.1, 50, died 2020)

San Diego Safari Park (2)
Winston (1.0, 52, still alive)
Vila (0,1, 61, died in 2018)

Fort Worth Zoo* (2*)
Note: Only Ramses was included on the list online, which was updated last month, but I've found other sources saying Amani is 50 years old.
Ramses I (52, still alive)
Amani (50, still alive)

Zoos With One Long-Lived Gorilla (8)
Brookfield Zoo (1.0)
Cincinnati Zoo (0.1)
Dallas Zoo (0.1)
Hogle Zoo (0.1)
Little Rock Zoo (0.1)
Oklahoma City Zoo (0.1)
Pittsburgh Zoo (0.1)
Philadelphia Zoo (1.0)

Zoos currently exhibiting gorillas with zero animals to live over 50 (30)
ABQ BIoPark
Audubon Zoo
Bronx Zoo
Buffalo Zoo
Busch Gardens Tampa
Cheyenne Mountain Zoo
Cleveland Metroparks Zoo
Como Park Zoo
Denver Zoo
Detroit Zoo
Disney's Animal Kingdom (listed as having a 52-year-old gorilla, but it sounds like she died in 2017 and the zoo didn't announce it)
Franklin Park Zoo (listed as having a 50-year-old, but I believe that Gigi was mixed up with a different Gigi from Germany)
Houston Zoo (they do currently have a 49-year-old gorilla, I believe! Hopefully soon to join the list!)
Jacksonville Zoo
Kansas City Zoo
Lincoln Park Zoo
Los Angeles Zoo
Memphis Zoo
Milwaukee County Zoo
North Carolina Zoo
Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo
Riverbanks Zoo
St. Louis Zoo
San Francisco Zoo
Santa Barbara Zoo
Sedgwick County Zoo
Smithsonian's National Zoo
Toledo Zoo
Zoo Knoxville
Zoo Miami

I find it interesting to note that out of 15 zoos that have had a gorilla live to over 50, 7 of them (nearly half) have been home to more than one. With so many excellent zoos never housing a gorilla who lived to over age 50, these clumps of elderly gorillas really stand out. Zoo Atlanta and Louisville seem particularly noteworthy for their animals' longevity.

Fort Worth is also the only zoo on the list to CURRENTLY house multiple gorillas over 50. The San Diego Safari Park also houses one living elderly gorilla, having held a previous one in the past.

Why do we think some of these zoos have multiple gorillas who live so long? Is it genetics of related gorillas? Does it have to do with how/where they spent their younger years? Is it purely standard of care? What kinds of medical conditions did these gorillas live with? (I know heart disease is a VERY common cause of death for great apes and that primate biscuits can contribute to it.) Did living with other elderly gorillas help them thrive? Here are a few things I've discovered, but I'd also love to hear your thoughts.

General notes
* Most of the gorillas who've lived over age 50 who lived in the same zoo as one another passed away within the last 5 years. With so many more gorillas living into their 50's now than in the past, this may indicate a higher general standard of care.
* Of the zoos with multiple older gorillas, 9 were 0.1 and 6 were 1.0. Of the zoos with single gorillas, 8 were 0.1 and only 2 were 1.0.
* All 4 of Zoo Atlanta's elderly gorillas were wild-born. Of the rest, 14 were wild, 6 captive, and I can't find anything on Pete at Woodland Park.

Are any of these gorillas related?
* Ramses I at the Fort Worth Zoo and Samantha at Cincinnati Zoo were siblings, and their sister Gigi lived to be 47 (though she was erroneously listed as being 50 elsewhere). This does seem potentially significant to me. None of the others seem to be related, as far as I can tell.

Zoos these gorillas lived at (but didn't die at)
*Timmy spent 25 years at the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo and around 20 years at the Bronx Zoo before retiring to Louisville.
*Before moving to Zoo Atlanta, Ivan famously spent many years in a small cage in a shopping mall. So you likely can't attribute his excellent longevity to spectacular care earlier in life.
*Ozoum, Choomba, and Shamba at Atlanta all spent at least 20 years at the Yerkes Primate Center before moving to Atlanta.
*Lamydoc spent 13 years in Pittsburgh
* Ramses and Amani spent roughly 20 years at the Cincinnati Zoo
* Trudy from Little Rock spent over 20 years at the St. Louis Zoo
* Gorgeous from Hogle Zoo lived at the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo for 30+ years

What did the longest-lived gorillas die of?
* Most died of vaguely-defined complications of old age/quality of life, which is to be expected
* Demba, Timmy, Colo, and Samantha, died or were euthanized due to heart disease (Pongi could also be included here). This is probably the most common cause of death besides vague decline of health, but is actually less common than I expected among this population.
* Ivan and Pongi died under general anesthetic, which is also common
* While Ozoum's cause of death wasn't revealed (he was ill and not eating or drinking before death), he had survived COVID-19 several months before which may have weakened him as he was extremely elderly
* Katanga had cancer. Jenny had an inoperable stomach tumor
* Ramar at Brookfield was euthanized due to diminished bowel function/ blockage
* Massa at Philadelphia Zoo died of a stroke.
* While Lamydoc was euthanized due to 'age-related' complications, these did include both heart disease and symptoms of dementia (which I didn't know was a thing for gorillas)
*Of the living elderly gorillas, Winston at San Diego Safari Park is known to have heart disease.

Does anyone else have any thoughts or reflections or patterns they'd like to share?

Hi, I manage the list of oldest hominids you are referring to. I was cleaning it up today when I came across this thread. I would just like to query your remark about the Berlin Zoo gorilla named 'Gigi' (stud #129) as having actually died at 47 years old, not 50 years old. Both her entry in the official studbook and Gorilla Land list her as being born in the wild in 1959 and having passed away on 17th September 2009, aged 50. The reason the 47 figure was circulated by some news outlets is because they mistook her date of capture (6th November 1961) as her date of birth, which of course it isn't. Anyways, thank you for taking the time to look at the list. :)

I must at some point get around to sorting out the chimpanzee section, it takes me a couple of days to sift through all the studbooks and collect the info then type it up so it's a matter of finding the time.

Gorilla Land entry for Gigi: Gorillas Land | Gigi
 
I only looked at the US population because I was interested in analyzing trends within the US population specifically. The animals within this population move around between American zoos and breed with one another and generally follow AZA standards of care. I also only speak English and some German, so I wouldn't be able to check information as thoroughly for gorillas in countries where neither language is spoken.

As for my source for the Gigi information? On the Wikipedia article for longest-lived gorillas, it listed a Gigi at the Franklin Park Zoo as having been born in 1959 and dying in 2009, making her 50. But when I looked up "Gigi Franklin Park Zoo," I got multiple articles about a gorilla who died in 2019 at age 47.

Curious where the other stats came from, I googled "Gigi gorilla died 2009" and found a German news article about a gorilla named Gigi who died in 2009 at the Berlin Zoo. In fact, I remember seeing a gorilla named Gigi at the Berlin Zoo as a kid. So I think that was where the confusion happened. And that's why I fact-checked the animals listed on Wikipedia (and found an additional gorilla over 50 not listed there).

My source about Animal Kingdom's Benga is her entry from Gorillas Land. It lists her under 'former population' and says she died in 2017. She's not listed under the Western Lowland Gorillas population thread in the North America section here on Zoochat. I also can't find any mentions of her in news articles since then or any new photos of her. The Disney parks blog also states that Gino is the oldest gorilla at Disney's Animal Kingdom at age 42.

This is correct- Gigi who lived at Franklin Park was born at the Cincinnati Zoo in 1972 to King Tut x Penelope, and she died in 2019.
 
This is correct- Gigi who lived at Franklin Park was born at the Cincinnati Zoo in 1972 to King Tut x Penelope, and she died in 2019.

It appears TheGytrash has got the Cincinnati Zoo gorilla named Gigi (1972-2019; aged 47) mixed up with the Berlin Zoo Gigi (1959-2009; aged 50). Easily done with identical names.
 
No, I didn't get them mixed up, I was saying that my source got them mixed up. The Franklin Park Zoo Gigi was 47. The Berlin Zoo Gigi (who I wasn't including on my list here because I'm only talking about USA zoos) was 50.
 
No, I didn't get them mixed up, I was saying that my source got them mixed up. The Franklin Park Zoo Gigi was 47. The Berlin Zoo Gigi (who I wasn't including on my list here because I'm only talking about USA zoos) was 50.
Sorry, I misunderstood your post. The reason I said so was because someone edited the list entry for Gigi and changed her age to 47, which for the Berlin Zoo Gigi on the list is incorrect.

Anyways, here is an updated list of all the United States gorillas, who have lived to the age of 50 years or more. Might help you with your research for any patterns or trends. :)

1. Helen (F)
1 January 1958 - 14 October 2022
Aged 64 years, 286 days
Louisville Zoo

2. Trudy (F)
1 January 1956 - 24 July 2019
Aged 63 years, 204 days
Little Rock Zoo

3. Vila (F)
1 January 1957 - 27 January 2018
Aged 61 years, 26 days
San Diego Safari Park

4. Ozoum (M)
1 January 1961 - 25 January 2022
Aged 61 years, 24 days
Atlanta Zoo

5. Lamydoc (M)
1 January 1962 - 22 February 2022
Aged 60 years, 52 days
Gladys Porter Zoo

6. Colo (F)
22 December 1956 - 17 January 2017
Aged 60 years, 26 days
Columbus Zoo

7. Choomba (F)
1 January 1963 - 13 January 2022
Aged 59 years, 12 days
Atlanta Zoo

8. Shamba (F)
1 January 1959 - 27 October 2017
Aged 58 years, 299 days
Atlanta Zoo

9. Jenny (F)
1 January 1953 - 4 September 2008
Aged 55 years, 237 days
Dallas Zoo

10. Masa (M)
1 January 1930 - 30 December 1984
Aged 54 years, 364 days
Philadelphia Zoo

11. Femelle (F)
1 January 1962 - 12 December 2016
Aged 54 years, 346 days
Milwaukee County Zoo

12. Ramses I (M)
12 April 1971 - Living
Aged 53 years, 138 days
Fort Worth Zoo

13. Mumbah (M)
1 January 1965 - 18 May 2018
Aged 53 years, 137 days
Columbus Zoo and Aquarium

14. Timmy (M)
1 January 1959 - 2 August 2011
Aged 52 years, 213 days
Louisville Zoo

15. Winston (M)
1 January 1972 - 13 July 2024
Aged 52 years, 194 days
San Diego Zoo

16. King (M)
1 January 1969 - 13 April 2021
Aged 52 years, 102 days
Monkey Jungle

17. Katanga (F)
1 January 1963 - 27 February 2015
Aged 52 years, 57 days
Gladys Porter Zoo

18. Josephine (F)
1 January 1965 - 18 January 2017
Aged 52 years, 17 days
Miami Zoo

19. Pete (M)
1 January 1967 - 5 November 2018
Aged 51 years, 308 days
Woodland Park Zoo

20. Amani (F)
1 January 1973 - Living
Aged 51 years, 240 days
Fort Worth Zoo


21. Mac (M)
1 January 1953 - 19 May 2004
Aged 51 years, 139 days
Houston Zoo

22. Kishina (F)
7 August 1972 - 12 September 2023
Aged 51 years, 36 days
Busch Gardens Tampa

23. Pongi (F)
1 January 1963 - 1 February 2014
Aged 51 years, 31 days
Columbus Zoo and Aquarium

24. Zakula (F)
1 January 1968 - 14 December 2018
Aged 50 years, 347 days
Pittsburgh Zoo and PPG Aquarium

25. Demba (F)
10 July 1970 - 21 May 2021
Aged 50 years, 315 days
Louisville Zoo

26. Gorgeous (F)
1 January 1949 - 9 October 1999
Aged 50 years, 281 days
Hogle Zoo

27. Ivan (M)
1 January 1962 - 21 August 2012
Aged 50 years, 233 days
Atlanta Zoo

28. Amanda (F)
1 January 1970 - 27 May 2020
Aged 50 years, 147 days
Woodland Park Zoo

29. Ramar (M)
1 January 1968 - 12 April 2018
Aged 50 years, 101 days
Brookfield Zoo

30. Fredrika (F)
5 June 1974 - Living
Aged 50 years, 84 days
Cleveland Metroparks Zoo


31. Samantha (F)
31 January 1970 - 29 March 2020
Aged 50 years, 58 days
Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Gardens

32. Kathryn (F)
1 January 1963 - 19 February 2013
Aged 50 years, 49 days
Oklahoma City Zoo and Botanical Gardens

The next American gorilla to turn 50 is Machi (Stud #609) from Atlanta Zoo, if she is still alive as of 1 March 2026.

Statistics:
65th birthday attained : 0 individuals
64th birthday attained : 1 individual
63rd birthday attained : 2 individuals
62nd birthday attained : 2 individuals
61st birthday attained : 4 individuals
60th birthday attained : 6 individuals
59th birthday attained : 7 individuals
58th birthday attained : 8 individuals
57th birthday attained : 8 individuals
56th birthday attained : 8 individuals
55th birthday attained : 9 individuals
54th birthday attained : 11 individuals
53rd birthday attained : 13 individuals
52nd birthday attained : 18 individuals
51st birthday attained : 23 individuals
50th birthday attained : 32 individuals
 
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