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Charles the Gorilla

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charles
SpeciesWestern lowland gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla)
SexMale
Bornc. (1972-09-23)September 23, 1972
Gabon
DiedOctober 29, 2024(2024-10-29) (aged 52)
Toronto Zoo, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Known forSilverback of a troop of gorillas for 30 years, visual artist
Offspring11
Named afterCharlie Brown

Charles the Gorilla (c. September 23, 1972 – October 29, 2024) was a wild-born western lowland gorilla from Gabon, West Africa who was notable for being the silverback of the Toronto Zoo's gorilla troop from September 1974 until his death in October 2024.

Biography

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Early life

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Although the date of his birth is unknown his approximate date of birth is September 23, 1972; it was, however, celebrated on January 19 each year.[1] At a time when humans were less vigilant about their treatment of threatened and endangered species, Charles was sought after by a group of poachers interested in acquiring gorillas for international trade. At the time, gorilla infants could fetch a price of up to $5000.00. He is thought to have been found next to his mother's corpse.

Toronto Zoo

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On September 24, 1974, Charles was sent to the Toronto Zoo, where he lived ever afterwards. His name was given to him because his particularly round face reminded the staff at the zoo of Charlie Brown. When Charles was first brought to the zoo, he was considered rather unattractive because he was missing part of his hair and had lesions and/or sores that bespeckled his body.

Charles, along with Amanda, Barney, Caroline, Josephine, Julia, and Samantha, were part of the Toronto Zoo's first acquisition of a group of wild-caught gorillas for the newly opened zoo. The Toronto Zoo opened its doors in August 1974 and since then some 33 million visitors have seen the zoo's gorillas (a figure which grew by about a million people each year). This group of seven gorillas has conceived over 33 children and are represented by more than 23 living offspring, comprising three generations. Charles sired eleven children, of which eight still survive today. He also had six grandchildren.[2]

Offspring

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In total, Charles sired 11 offspring. His daughter Sekani (born 1990) now lives in Arkansas at the Little Rock Zoo. His son Jomo (born 1991, died 2022) resided at the Cincinnati Zoo. Both Jomo and Sekani are parents to two boys. His third adult son Subira resided at the Dallas Zoo. He also has five younger offspring, Johari (female, born May 12, 2001), Sadiki (male, born March 7, 2005), Nassir (male, born September 2, 2009), Nneka (female, born January 9, 2014), and Charlie (female, born June 7, 2018)[3][4] who remain at the Toronto Zoo.

Another of Charles' offspring was sent to the Dallas Zoo where in March 2004, Jabari (born 1990) escaped his enclosure and injured 3 patrons. Jabari was supposedly thrown into a fit of rage by a group of youths that taunted him and, in an effort to exact his revenge, he climbed a 5.5-metre (18 feet) wall and ran amok in the visitors' viewing area while patrons fled in panic. After 45 minutes outside of his exhibit, the Dallas police were called in to control the situation. In what was reported as an attack on officers, Dallas police shot and killed Jabari before zoo staff could dart or subdue him.

Later life and death

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On August 15, 2024, a bronze statue of Charles was unveiled outside his home of the zoo's African Rainforest pavilion to commemorate his long life as well as the Toronto Zoo's 50th anniversary.

On October 29, 2024, Charles died at the age of 52, with his keepers and his daughter, Johari, at his side. He had begun to exhibit signs of heart failure the week prior, and a post-mortem examination revealed that significant changes to his heart had been made.[5]

Artwork

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Charles was an accomplished painter. Although the group had always been exposed to the visual arts, Charles' niche for the medium sprang up as a result of behavioural enrichment during a turbulent time in the gorilla group's stay at the Toronto Zoo. During a period of time between 1990 and 1998, Charles (who grew into a well-sized Silverback male) was not interested in interacting with offspring that were not his own. And so in an effort to allow the gorilla group to meet with some of the zoo's other gorilla progeny (i.e., Barney's children), Charles spent a brief period of each day in solitude. In an effort to keep Charles contented during these intervals away from his harem, Charles was given access to large sheets of paper and non-toxic coloured paints. In an effort to raise funds for a new gorilla exhibit at the Toronto Zoo, some of these works were exhibited and sold at a private art gallery and were sold for $400 to $800 each which raised over $37,000.00 for the Toronto Zoo.[6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "More from Charles's big celebration today". Facebook. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
  2. ^ "Getting to know our troop". Retrieved March 9, 2016.
  3. ^ "Toronto Zoo's Gorillas to Welcome New Member". Archived from the original on January 2, 2010.
  4. ^ "Meet our Baby Lowland Western Gorilla, Nneka!". Retrieved March 25, 2015.
  5. ^ Casaletto, Lucas (October 30, 2024). "Toronto Zoo says Charles, its beloved 52-year-old gorilla, has died". City News. Retrieved October 30, 2024.
  6. ^ Toronto Zoo history page on Toronto Zoo website Archived February 20, 2007, at the Wayback Machine