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Friday, 9 January 2026
Wild mountain gorilla gives birth to twins in Virunga National Park.
Mafuko, a mountain gorilla who lives in the Virunga National Park, has given birth to twins. (Supplied: Virunga National Park)
In short:
A wild mountain gorilla named Mafuko has given birth to twins in Virunga National Park, in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The
population of mountain gorillas is just over 1,000 worldwide, so the
birth of the twins is significant for conservation efforts.
What's next?
Virunga
National Park is providing monitoring and protection measures to
support the twins' health and survival during this critical early
period.
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A wild mountain gorilla named Mafuko has given birth to twins in a Democratic Republic of Congo national park.
The twins are male and both appeared to be healthy, staff from Virunga National Park said.
Community
trackers responsible for monitoring the health of the mountain gorilla
population in the park discovered the "rare and remarkable" birth of
twins in the Bageni family of mountain gorillas on January 3.
It increases the Bageni family to 59 gorillas, the largest in the park.
Rare and endangered
Twins
are rare among mountain gorillas and present additional challenges,
particularly during the early months when infants are entirely dependent
on their mother for care and transport.
Virunga
National Park said it would provide additional monitoring and
protection measures to closely observe the twins and support their
health and survival during this critical period.
At
the age of 22, Mafuko has given birth to a total of seven newborns,
including a set of twins in 2016, who died a week after birth.
The
world's entire population of just over 1,000 endangered mountain
gorillas resides between the Virunga Mountains, a range of extinct
volcanoes that borders the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda and
Uganda, and Bwindi Forest.
The protected forests of Virunga National Park are home to more than one-third of the global population.
Conservation efforts continue
The
birth of the twins represents a major event for the dynamics of the
Bageni family and for ongoing conservation efforts to support the
continued growth of the endangered mountain gorilla population within
the park.
Since the discovery
of the mountain gorilla, a subspecies of the eastern gorilla, in 1902,
its population has endured war, hunting, habitat destruction and disease
— threats so severe that it was once thought the species would be
extinct by the end of the 20th century.
The
recovery of mountain gorilla populations, despite ongoing civil
conflict, poaching, and habitat loss, is a huge conservation
achievement.
According to the
International Gorilla Conservation Programme, there are 44 habituated
mountain gorilla families across Uganda, Rwanda and the DRC.
Family groups range in size, with an average of 10 family members.
Mountain
gorillas live in forests high in the mountains and have thicker and
more fur than other great apes, which helps them to survive in a habitat
where temperatures often drop below freezing.
But, as humans have moved more into the gorillas' territory,
they have been pushed further up into the mountains for longer periods,
forcing them to endure dangerous and sometimes deadly conditions.
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