Finding gorillas isn’t easy. If the big apes hear people coming, they usually run away. Instead, the scientists looked for the nests that gorillas build to sleep in. Apes make these beds of sticks and leaves each evening and abandon them the next day. When the team spotted an ape nest, they checked under it for droppings. The shape of the dung told them whether the nest was used by a gorilla or a chimp.
After dozens of expeditions, the researchers had enough data to estimate the total number of gorillas in western Africa. They calculated that there were more than 360,000 of the apes in 2013—at least 100,000 more than previously known.
Unfortunately, over the course of the study, the population shrank by an average of 2.7 percent each year. Poaching, disease, and habitat loss are making it harder for gorillas to survive.
A healthy gorilla population can help the whole forest, says Maisels. As the apes eat fruits, they spread seeds in their dung, allowing new trees to grow. Maisels hopes that the data scientists have gathered will bring new protections for the animals. “We should go to great lengths to reverse the damage we’ve done,” she says.