Health & Medicine - Posted by Mary Gerity-Case Western on Wednesday, February 23, 2011 15:40 - 5 Comments    
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Gorillas get svelte on low-sugar diet

Although they take in twice as many calories on the new diet, after a year, the big boys of the primate house at Cleveland Metroparks Zoo have dropped nearly 65 pounds each and weigh in the range of their wild relatives.

CASE WESTERN (US) — Heart disease is the number one killer of male gorillas in North American zoos. A dietary experiment at a Cleveland zoo suggests sugar and starch play a role.





After a 21-year-old gorilla named Brooks died of heart failure at Cleveland Metroparks Zoo in 2005, researchers took a hard look at how the animals’ lifestyle affects their health. Elena Hoellein Less, a PhD candidate in biology at Case Western Reserve University, now leads an effort to counter the killer disease by returning the primates to a diet more akin to what they’d eat in the wild.

Gone is the bucketful of vitamin-rich, high-sugar, and high-starch foods that zoos used for decades to ensure gorillas received enough nutrients.

Instead, Cleveland’s Mokolo and Bebac receive a wheelbarrow of romaine lettuce, dandelion greens, and endive they gently tear and bite, alfalfa hay they nimbly pick through, young tree branches they strip of succulent bark and leaves, green beans, a handful of flax seeds, and three Centrum Silver multivitamins tucked inside half a smashed banana.

Instead of spending about a quarter of their day eating the old diet, the pair now spends 50 to 60 percent of each day feeding and foraging, about the same amount of time wild gorillas forage.

Although they take in twice as many calories on the new diet, after a year, the big boys of the primate house have dropped nearly 65 pounds each and weigh in the range of their wild relatives.

“We’re beginning to understand we may have a lot of overweight gorillas,” said Kristen Lukas, an adjunct assistant professor of biology at Case Western Reserve and chair of the Gorilla Species Survival Plan for the Association of Zoos and Aquariums. The organization serves 52 zoos in the U.S. and Canada in a coordinated effort to improve the health and survival of the nearly 350 gorillas in the population.

“And, we’re just recognizing that surviving on a diet and being healthy on a diet are different,” says Lukas, who is also curator of conservation and science at Cleveland Metroparks Zoo. “We’ve raised our standards and are asking, are they in the best condition to not only survive but to thrive?”

Less has been monitoring the diet and resulting habits of the gorillas. She also has been measuring the amount of fat on the backs of the apes and attempting to discern what benefits against heart disease they may be gaining with the new diet, using biomarkers of insulin resistance and inflammation as guides.

She’s creating a body mass index for the animals, similar to that used to gauge healthy weight and makeup in humans.

Though these zoo gorillas now weigh about the same or sometimes more than their wild counterparts, “we believe those in the wild have more muscle,” Less says.

If the continuing study finds that to be true, she adds, “The next step is exercising gorillas in zoos.”

In addition to dropping weight and becoming active feeders, the gorillas also dropped a habit seen only in zoo gorillas, a habit that literally turned patrons away. Whether to taste sugar again and again, or to take up time not spent foraging or because large amounts of sugar and starch didn’t sit well; on the old diet, the gorillas would repeatedly spit up and then eat what they’d just spit up.

“That behavior has been completely eliminated with the new diet,” Less notes.

Versions of the new diet are being tested at zoos in Columbus, North Carolina, Toronto, and Seattle. Results are expected later this year.

More news from Case Western Reserve: www.case.edu/think/

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5 Comments

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Dr. O'
Feb 24, 2011 16:12

That sounds a lot like the diet I recommended for my patients. Most of them didn’t like it but those that used it were much healthier.

Dr. Horrible
Feb 24, 2011 16:53

You expected them to WANT to eat tree bark?

social media manager
Feb 25, 2011 17:30

I am trying this diet based off of Tim Ferris The 4 hour body. The hardest part I’ve found is that Im not use to all the legumes and extra vegetables for calories.

kari
Feb 25, 2011 18:14

Who thought feeding gorillas sugar was a good thing in the first place? I assumed zoos would automatically attempt to feed the animals that which they eat in the wild. Duh.

kari
Feb 25, 2011 18:14

Who thought feeding gorillas sugar was a good thing in the first place? I assumed zoos would automatically attempt to feed the animals that which they eat in the wild.

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