Mitochondrial DNA sequence from an enigmatic gorilla population (Gorilla gorilla uellensis)

2003 
Although today gorillas are found in only two widely separate, discontinuous western and eastern African populations, rumors of the existence of an addi- tional gorilla population in central Africa have inspired recent unsuccessful field expeditions in search of the "mystery ape" termed Gorilla gorilla uellensis. Such a gorilla population would have considerable conservation and scientific interest, and would presumably have de- scended from a population of gorillas that was thought to exist until the end of the 19th century on the Uele River in the current-day Democratic Republic of Congo. However, the sole evidence for the existence of these gorillas is three skulls and one mandible brought to the Royal Museum for Central Africa (Tervuren, Belgium) in 1898. We deter- mined a mitochondrial DNA sequence from one of these specimens and compared it to sequences from other goril- las. Contrary to expectations, the sequence obtained did not exhibit the phylogenetic distinctiveness typical of a representative of a peripheral isolated population. Rather, the results suggest a scenario in which the museum spec- imens did not originally derive from the northern Congo, but were brought from the area of current distribution of western gorillas to that location; the subsequent discovery and collection of the specimens there gave rise to the false inference of a local gorilla population. Am J Phys An- thropol 121:361-368, 2003. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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