 And just before we go, let us tell you about Fatou, the world's oldest living gorilla. At this age, the Western lowland gorilla is what Berlin Zoo calls almost something of a legend. Christian Oist, in charge of apes, said gorillas living in the wild have a life expectancy of about 40 years. And at 65, she has been the world's oldest living gorilla for a while, describing it as absolutely extraordinary. Fatou enjoyed her birthday cake made of boiled rice and curd, vegetables, raspberries and blueberries. Gorillas living in the wild have a life expectancy of about 40 years, and at 65, she has been the world's oldest living gorilla for a while. 65 is absolutely extraordinary, and that obviously needs to be celebrated in style. If you'd like to compare her age to humans, I would say as a human, she's certainly well above 100 years old. They mainly get vegetables and the sugar they receive at most is fruit sugar, and that's what she was offered today in the shape of raspberries and blueberries. They were the decoration of a rice cake made of boiled rice, a thin layer of rice and some curd, so it sticks together. The bottom was made of a lot of green stuff, dandelion and lettuce.