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When female gorillas leave one social group and join another, they tend to seek out groups with other females that they've ...
Researchers found female gorillas avoid males they grew up with when moving and look for females they already know ...
1 小时
The New Times on MSNStudy from volcanoes park shows gorillas reconnect with old female friends after years apart
A new study done in Rwanda's Volcanoes National Park has found that female mountain gorillas often choose to join groups where they know someone, especially other females they lived with in the past, ...
22 小时
Smithsonian Magazine on MSNFemale Gorillas Form Ties That Bind, Helping Them Join New Social Groups
A new study finds that when female mountain gorillas move to a new crowd, they look for females they’ve already met ...
Over 50 years ago, the idea that males had universal social power over females across all mammalian species was challenged by ...
Robin Roberts travels to Rwanda's Volcanoes National Park, where the last thousand endangered mountain gorillas live in the wild.
The size difference of a female (with an infant), and a male mountain gorilla in Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, Uganda.
7 小时
Newser on MSNLike Us, Female Gorillas Lean on Old Friends
Female mountain gorillas in Rwanda appear to use a strategy familiar to many humans when entering new social situations: they ...
A long-term study of mountain gorillas finds that when female gorillas move into a new group, they pick one that contains buddies they've lived with before.
Research shaped by 20 years of data shows the key traits female gorillas look for when seeking a new social group and what ...
A new study by scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig and the University of Turku ...
They're one of our closest relatives in the animal kingdom.Now, a new study reveals that in gorilla communities, girls have ...
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