Ozzie: The World's Oldest Male Gorilla Dies Aged 61 at US Zoo

Ozzie: The World's Oldest Male Gorilla Dies Aged 61 at US Zoo

  • The world's oldest male gorilla, 61-year-old Ozzie, was found dead at Zoo Atlanta in the United States
  • Ozzie was among the 13 gorillas at the same zoo who tested positive for COVID-19 in 2021
  • The cause of death is yet to be established, but the ape has recently been treated for facial swelling, weakness and an inability to eat or drink

Ozzie, the world's oldest male gorilla, has died at a zoo in the US aged 61, Zoo Atlanta officials have confirmed.

Ozzie: The World's Oldest Male Gorilla Dies Aged 61 at US Zoo
Ozzie had been treated for facial swelling, weakness and an inability to eat or drink over the last 24 hours. Photo: Zoo Atlanta.
Source: UGC

The western lowland silverback primate was found dead by the team of warders who have been taking care of him, NBC News reports.

According to a statement issued by the zoo's management, Ozzie's cause of death was not immediately known.

The statement further indicated that the zoo would share results of the animal's necropsy once the details are issued by the University of Georgia's veterinary college.

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It is, however, important to note that the ape had been treated for facial swelling, weakness and an inability to eat or drink over the last 24 hours.

Devastating loss

Zoo Atlanta CEO Raymond King termed the demise of the animal with a taste for oranges and cabbage a devastating loss for the park.

"While we knew this time would come someday, that inevitability does nothing to stem the deep sadness we feel at losing a legend," he mourned.

Ozzie, who weighed 158kg at the time of his death, was a "terrific father" who had fathered 12 gorillas since he arrived at the zoo in 1988.

He was the third oldest gorilla in the world behind two older females, the oldest being a 64-year-old female named Fatou, who lives in a Berlin zoo.

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Statistics from the World Wildlife Fund Poaching indicate that poaching and diseases have reduced the population of the apes by 60 per cent, which is leaving them endangered.

Ozzie tested positive for COVID-19 in 2021

Ozzie was among the 13 gorillas at Zoo Atlanta who tested positive for COVID-19 in 2021, with officials indicating that they contracted the virus from an asymptomatic employee.

This happened even as the worker was fully vaccinated and was wearing protective equipment.

The decision to carry out COVID-19 tests on the animals was informed when two of them started coughing.

Two gorillas pose for selfie in viral photo

Two giant gorillas were not going to let a camera opportunity skip them when an anti-poaching ranger pulled out his phone for a selfie on Thursday, April 18, 2019.

The two primates named Ndakasi and Matabishi live in Virunga National Park, a conservation area in the Democratic Republic of Congo which is protected by 600 rangers.

On this particular day, one officer Patrick Sadiki was on his daily routine job when he snapped a sweet selfie capturing the incredible human side of the gigantic apes.

Source: Legit.ng

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