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Cincinnati Zoo Gorilla 'Samantha' Turns 50

Samantha, the oldest living mammal born at the Cincinnati Zoo, will turn 50 on Jan. 31, 2020. [Courtesy of the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden]
Samantha, the oldest living mammal born at the Cincinnati Zoo, will turn 50 on Jan. 31, 2020.

The oldest living animal ever born at the Cincinnati Zoo turns 50 Friday. "Samantha" is the sixth oldest of the more than 360 gorillas in North America.

The zoo has been sharing facts about gorillas on social media in the 50 days leading up to Friday's celebration. Considered the " Grand Ol' Lady" of the Cincinnati Zoo, Samantha is being honored with a birthday cake made of yogurt, fruit and "nutritionally complete primate chow," with a few surprises hidden in the cake base. She and her family group will also enjoy "a forest full of their favorite plant snack items like forsythia, banana leaves, fiscus, bamboo as well as fresh melons."

Samantha was raised with another gorilla named Sam. They were born 12 days apart in 1970 and were hand-raised with help from staff at Good Samaritan Hospital, from which both their names were derived. Not much was known about how to rear baby gorillas, and the zoo's former Ape House wasn't conducive to a mother gorilla raising her own young, so the pair spent their first weeks at Good Sam.

The zoo describes Samantha as "a mother, grandmother, great grandmother, matriarch, role model, record setter, and an inspirational ambassador." She's lived with more than 40 other gorillas during her years at the zoo, given birth to six babies, and has descendants across North America. Samantha's parents, "King Tut" and "Penelope," were considered two of Cincinnati's "founder" gorillas.

The Cincinnati Zoo's first gorilla, "Susie," arrived in 1931 from Europe, riding aboard the Graf Zeppelin. She took up residence in what is now the Reptile House and was popular with visitors, as Curator of Primates Ron Evans explains:

"Susie was billed as the world’s only trained gorilla and would sit at tea tables, eat with utensils and pose for photos wearing various outfits. Back in those days, zoos were more about entertainment than education, conservation, science or organized animal welfare. Although not how we interpret or care for gorillas today, Susie was already showing the awesome power gorillas had to command our attention and inspire introspection and caring."

When Samantha was born in 1970, gorillas lived indoors year-round in the Ape House. In 1978 she moved into Gorilla World, the first-ever naturalist outdoor habitat.

Fifty gorillas have been born at the Cincinnati Zoo.

"Western lowland gorillas are critically endangered in the wild, with fewer than 175,000 individuals," the zoo points out. "Due primarily to habitat destruction caused by logging, mineral mining and agricultural expansion, wild gorilla numbers continue to shrink. The bushmeat trade – the killing of wild animals to be used as human food – is also a major threat to the western lowland gorilla population throughout the Central African rainforests. More than 1,000 gorillas are illegally poached for the bushmeat trade each year."

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