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Featured researches published by Amos Courage.


International Journal of Primatology | 2012

Assessing Initial Reintroduction Success in Long-Lived Primates by Quantifying Survival, Reproduction, and Dispersal Parameters: Western Lowland Gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) in Congo and Gabon

Tony King; Christelle Chamberlan; Amos Courage

Postrelease monitoring is an important aspect of reintroduction projects, one outcome of which is to allow an assessment of the initial success of the reintroduction, often measured by quantifying survival and reproduction rates. In long-lived species, accurate estimations of demographic parameters are difficult to obtain, and therefore assessment of reintroduction success in such species is challenging. To assess the initial success of a reintroduction program for the long-lived, slow-reproducing, and critically endangered western lowland gorilla Gorilla gorilla gorilla, we analyzed postrelease monitoring data from 2 reintroduced populations, in the Batéké Plateau region of the Republics of Congo and Gabon, to quantify several demographic parameters, and compared our results with published data on wild gorilla populations. Annual survival rate of the 51 released gorillas was 97.4%, 9 females gave birth to 11 infants at an annual birth rate of 0.196 births per adult female, and first-year survival of the infants was 81.8%. Annual birth rate within the reintroduced populations is not significantly different from that given for wild western gorilla populations, and other demographic parameters fall within the range of published data for wild gorilla populations. Our analysis illustrates that the reintroduction program has been successful in terms of the initial measures of postrelease survival and reproduction, and our quantitative data should facilitate the development of a population model that can predict the probability of population persistence and therefore provide an indication of longer-term reintroduction success.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Behavioural Ecology and Group Cohesion of Juvenile Western Lowland Gorillas (Gorilla g. gorilla) during Rehabilitation in the Batéké Plateaux National Park, Gabon

Guillaume Le Flohic; Peggy Motsch; Hélène DeNys; Simon Childs; Amos Courage; Tony King

Rehabilitation of animals followed by reintroduction into the wild can benefit conservation by supplementing depleted wild populations or reintroducing a species in an area where it has been extirpated or become extinct. The western lowland gorilla (WLG, Gorilla g. gorilla) is persistently poached; infants are often illegally traded and used as pets. Some are confiscated and rehabilitated, then kept in sanctuaries or reintroduced into the wild. Prior to reintroduction, the ability of the orphans to survive independently in their environment needs to be assessed. Here, we performed a multivariate analysis, including diet composition, activity-budget, and pattern of strata using of a group of five juvenile WLG in the process of rehabilitation and distinguished three sub-periods of ecological significance: the high furgivory period, the Dialium fruits consumption period, and the high folivory period. The consequences of these variations on their well-being (play behaviour) and the group cohesion (spatial proximity and social interactions) were examined. Like wild WLGs, diets shifted seasonally from frugivorous to folivorous, while the same staple foods were consumed and large amounts of Dialium fruits were seasonally gathered high in trees. When succulent fruit intake was the highest, thus providing high energy from sugar, juveniles spent less time feeding, more time playing and group cohesion was the highest. Conversely, the cohesion decreased with increasing folivory, individuals spent more time feeding and less time playing together. Nonetheless, the group cohesion also decreased after the death of one highly social, wild-born orphan. This may underscore the importance of skilled individuals in the cohesion and well-being of the entire group and, ultimately, to rehabilitation success. This study evaluates the rehabilitation success with regards to the methods used and highlights the need to consider a set of individual and environmental factors for enhancing rehabilitation while preserving the local biodiversity and individual well-being.


Oryx | 2014

Assessing reintroduction success in long-lived primates through population viability analysis: western lowland gorillas Gorilla gorilla gorilla in Central Africa

Tony King; Christelle Chamberlan; Amos Courage


Archive | 2005

REHABILITATION OF ORPHAN GORILLAS AND BONOBOS IN THE CONGO

Tony King; Christelle Chamberlan; Amos Courage


Archive | 2006

Gorilla reintroduction, Republic of Congo

Tony King; Christelle Chamberlan; Amos Courage


Archive | 2004

Gorilla re-introduction to the Lefini Reserve - the first years results after seventeen years of preparation

Anthony Wayne King; Ian R. Henderson; Christelle Chamberlan; Amos Courage


Archive | 2005

Gorilla reintroduction to the Lefini Reserve - the second release

Anthony Wayne King; Christelle Chamberlan; Amos Courage


African Journal of Ecology | 2018

A camera trap assessment of the forest mammal community within the transitional savannah‐forest mosaic of the Batéké Plateau National Park, Gabon (advance online)

Daniela Hedwig; Ivonne Kienast; Matthieu Bonnet; Bryan K. Curran; Amos Courage; Christophe Boesch; Hjalmar S. Kühl; Tony King


Archive | 2013

Reinforcing the isolated Javan langur population in the Coban Talun Protected Forest, East Java, Indonesia

Made Wedana; Iwan Kurniawan; Zulfi Arsan; Novianto Bambang Wawandono; Amos Courage; Tony King


Archive | 2013

Summary of the proposal to reinforce the reintroduced gorilla population in Gabon

Tony King; Amos Courage

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Tony King

The Aspinall Foundation

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Simon Childs

The Aspinall Foundation

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