Guests on the San Diego Zoo in California had been left in shock over the weekend after an animal went bananas.
A male gorilla charged his habitat, shattering one layer of the three-layer glass window.
Dramatic video reveals the second the western lowland gorilla stormed the tempered glass on Saturday.
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Reactions from the group could be heard within the background — with zoo guests gasping.
Zoo officers confirmed the incident to the New York Put up, noting it was their 10-year-old gorilla named Denny who was accountable.
A gorilla is proven inside its enclosure on the San Diego Zoo on the time of the incident on Saturday, Oct. 11. (Emily Holguin)
The ten-year-old gorilla was within the enclosure with one other animal and was not injured.
“It is common for male gorillas, especially in adolescence, to express these types of behaviors,” the San Diego spokesperson instructed the NYP.
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The spokesperson added that “bursts of energy, charging, dragging items or running sideways are all natural [behaviors] for a young male.”
Shattered glass is proven in a gorilla enclosure on the San Diego Zoo. (Emily Holguin)
Western lowland gorillas can attain 4 to six ft tall, weighing between 155 and 420 kilos, based on the Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Gardens (LAZB).
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“Gorillas at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park peel radishes with their teeth before eating them,” writes the web site.
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Males are usually twice the scale of females, with most members of the species dwelling between 35 and 50 years previous, based on LAZB.
A gorilla is seen on the San Diego Zoo, with the shattered glass proven at proper after a younger male (not pictured) charged the window. (Emily Holguin)
The Worldwide Fund for Animal Welfare notes that the western lowlands are the smallest of the gorilla species.
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