Oldest gorilla in captivity dies at 55

by master_jim2008 | September 5, 2008 at 12:59 pm
139 views | 2 Recommendations | 4 comments

DALLAS (AP) -- The oldest gorilla in captivity, a 55-year-old female named Jenny, has died at the Dallas Zoo, her home for more than half a century, a spokesman said Friday.

Jenny the gorilla celebrated her 55th birthday at the Dallas Zoo in May.

Jenny the gorilla celebrated her 55th birthday at the Dallas Zoo in May.

Zoo officials decided to euthanize Jenny on Thursday night because of an inoperable tumor in her stomach. Jenny had stopped eating and drinking recently, and tests showed that she was unlikely to recover, spokesman Sean Greene said.

Jenny's keepers described her as very sweet, though a little bossy.

"If she doesn't want to go out on a certain day, she doesn't," Todd Bowsher, curator of the zoo's Wilds of Africa exhibit, said in May, when the zoo held a birthday bash to celebrate Jenny's longevity. "But she really likes people."

The International Species Information System, which maintains records on animals at 700 institutions around the world, confirmed this year that Jenny was the oldest gorilla in its database.

Jenny was born in the wild and was acquired by the zoo in 1957. She gave birth in 1965 to a female named Vicki, and officials aren't sure why she didn't conceive again. Vicki was sent to a Canadian zoo at age 5.

At the time of Jenny's death, she was one of five gorillas at the Dallas Zoo.

Gorillas in the wild normally live to age 30 or 35, but they can survive years longer in a zoo, with veterinary care and protection from predators. Still, of the roughly 360 gorillas in North American zoos, only four were older than 50 as of this spring.

Just last month, another gorilla at the zoo, 43-year-old Hercules, died after undergoing a medical procedure for spinal disease.

In 2004, Dallas police shot and killed a 13-year-old gorilla named Jabari at the zoo after he jumped over a wall, bit three people and snatched up a toddler with his teeth. The enclosure was remodeled, and the city paid a fine to the U.S. Department of Agriculture

recommend This comment thread is now closed
0
Tina Kells

Very interesting and sad. I moved this to environment though since it will get more attention in that channel.

Emilio Lizardo
Emilio Lizardo
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 13:38 on September 5th, 2008

master_jim2008, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Very sad, Jim, she will be missed ...

0
master_jim2008

ty Tina

0
Amy Judd

Awww - that is so sad. She was quite a beautiful creature.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from