Background
This information has been reviewed.
Around 700 mountain gorillas survive in the wild, split almost evenly between two locations: the Virunga range of volcanic mountains on the borders of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Rwanda and Uganda, and in the Bwindi Impenetrable National Park in Uganda. Some primatologists believe the Bwindi gorillas may be a separate subspecies.
In the 100 years since its discovery, this subspecies of eastern gorilla has endured uncontrolled hunting, war, disease, destruction of their forest habitat, and capture for the illegal pet trade. These factors led to a dramatic decline in numbers. Indeed, there were fears that the mountain gorilla would become extinct in the same century it was discovered.
With the alarm raised, dedicated conservation initiatives have ensured that mountain gorilla numbers are now slowly increasing.
WWF on the ground
WWF's 30 years of work to save the mountain gorilla and its forest habitat in the cloud-shrouded mountains in the very heart of Africa represents one of its longest-running flagship species programmes. Early gorilla surveys and aid to protected areas in the Albertine Rift ecoregion started in the 1970s. In 1991, the effort evolved into today's International Gorilla Conservation Programme (IGCP), a joint initiative of the African Wildlife Foundation (AWF), Fauna and Flora International (FFI), and WWF.
ยป
Find out about the WWF African Great Apes Programme