Yes (I am sorry we changed your question completely.)
Mountain gorillas and silverback gorillas are not the same, but they are closely related. Mountain gorillas are a subspecies of the eastern gorilla, specifically found in the Virunga Mountains of Central Africa. The term "silverback" refers to adult male gorillas, regardless of their subspecies, characterized by the silver hair on their backs that develops with maturity. Thus, while all silverback gorillas can be mountain gorillas, not all mountain gorillas are silverbacks, as females and younger males do not have this distinctive feature.
Gorillas typically have black fur. However, the coloration can appear slightly different depending on the individual species or subspecies. Some gorillas may also have silver or grey coloration on their backs as they age.
no they are way better becoz they chilled with Dian Fossey and also they have different colour fur and they are found in the mountainns xx
Yes, mountain gorillas do live in forests, albeit at higher altitudes than other species of gorillas. The largest population of mountain gorillas can be found in the Albertine Rift montane cloud forests among the Viruga Mountains, a range of extinct volcanoes that border the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, and Uganda.
The Painted Turtle. The Mountain Gorilla. The Black Eyed Dragonfly. In The African Jungle.
The silverback gorilla is a mature male of the species, and it will be some 11 or 12 years old. Consider that as people age, their hair goes grey or silver. The same applies to the old male gorilla. It's that simple. The silverback is not a separate species or an animal that has mutated. For instance, a lowland gorilla is a lowland gorilla, whether it is a 2-year old female or a 13-year old silverback male at the head of the family.Adult Gorillas are known as silver backs due to the silver hair they develop when they reach adult hood
yeah there the same
She spent about 18 years studying Gorillas in Rwanda. She did extensive work in trying to protect Gorillas and to The film "Gorillas in the Mist" was made about her. She wrote a book of the same name.
monkeys and gorillas are in the same family as a chimpanzee
Outside of zoos and the like, bears and gorillas do not live together.
Not exactly. Gorillas are apes but not all apes are gorillas. Apes are defined as primates in one of the following groups. The lesser apes (aka gibbons) belong to the family Hylobatidae. The great apes (aka gorillas, orangutans, chimps and humans) belong to the family Hominidae.
same as a normal gorilla