COLUMBUS, Ohio, Nov. 13, 2006

Zookeeper Plays Mom To Baby Gorilla

Crawling, Climbing To Teach Primates What The Wild Ones Know

    • Eight-month-old gorilla Umande plays with a ball at the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium, Oct. 17, 2006, where he's been learning the ins and outs of primate life – with human help.

      Eight-month-old gorilla Umande plays with a ball at the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium, Oct. 17, 2006, where he's been learning the ins and outs of primate life – with human help.  (AP Photo/Columbus Dispatch)

    • Barb Jones, a primate nursery keeper at the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium, greets Umande, an eight-month-old gorilla, as he settles in for a nap, Oct. 17, 2006.

      Barb Jones, a primate nursery keeper at the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium, greets Umande, an eight-month-old gorilla, as he settles in for a nap, Oct. 17, 2006.  (AP Photo/Columbus Dispatch)

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(AP)  Barb Jones spends her days crawling through piles of straw with a 15-pound baby gorilla on her back, sometimes climbing up on platforms inside the cage.

It's all part of being a surrogate mother to baby gorillas, but that doesn't mean it's easy work for the 68-year-old Jones, who's been doing it for 26 years.

"Now, I need a little help scaling the ropes," she said. "But I can't not do what they are going to do."

Jones, a primate nursery keeper at the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium, works to break the cycle of primates born in captivity who never learn how to care for their offspring.

She teaches the young gorillas how to be babies while adult gorillas watch and learn their own roles. The hope is that the babies will grow up to be better caregivers that can look after their own young.

Jones' most recent project was Umande, who came to Columbus from a Colorado Springs zoo where his mother rejected him. Other females at the zoo didn't want him either. Last week, 40-year-old Lulu took over his care after weeks of Jones and other workers tending to him.

Umande was clearly at home with his human mother, even falling asleep in her lap.

"He's like a little heating blanket," Jones said.

Jones, whose experience is in teaching, started her work at the zoo as a volunteer. In her many years of experience, she's never been injured, she said. She's also picked up a few tricks, such as coughing when the babies misbehave, because that's what adult gorillas do.

She points out that she doesn't do everything a gorilla mother would, such as using its teeth to trim the baby's fingernails and toenails.

"We use clippers," she said.

The world's first gorilla born in captivity was Colo, born at the Columbus Zoo in 1956. Back then, baby gorillas were snatched away from their mothers and reared in nurseries. Zookeepers thought they were protecting the babies from adult gorillas.

But zookeepers later learned that gorillas need to learn from one another, said Beth Armstrong, an anthropologist and former gorilla keeper at the Columbus Zoo.

Keepers imitating primate behavior at the zoo has helped decrease the time it takes for an infant gorilla to become part of a pack. The bond between Umande and Lulu took only a matter of weeks.

©MMVI The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by catt42701 November 13, 2006 10:42 PM EST
Yes, the talent can be taught to human mothers whose own mothers were not nourshing as a parent. It takes a lot of work, a lot of patience and a lot of loving on the teachers part. To know how to love you need to be loved. With parents that aren't nuturing there is very little love shown so the child doesn't know how to love when the become parents. It's part of what is wrong in modern countries. There is so much stress on families that the ability to teach love is forgotten or omitted as being not important.
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by connapa November 13, 2006 5:40 PM EST
Its no surprise that all primates (including humans) have such a long childhood. Our genetics can only do so much. We need to "learn" the rest- how our society members interrelate, social skills, etc. Its the evolution of "culture" which has afforded us our position as the top primates on this planet.
We share over 95% of the same genes with both gorillas and chimpanzees. its cultural evolution which has helped to separate us further.
(Oh, and by the way, language skills are not exclusive to humans. Both Koko the gorilla and Washoe the chimp can carry on conversations in American Sign Language. They even know how to lie- something they probably picked up from us humans.)
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by ljburnell November 13, 2006 10:33 AM EST
Good job Mrs Jones,Now tell me your talent can be passed on to human mothers who have never learned to care for their young.
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