As the gorillas arrive in the sanctuary at a young age, they learn from their caretakers, said Shamavu.
"In terms of behavior, they like to mimic everything that is happening (around them), everything we do," Shamavu told The Associated Press.
He said the caretakers at Senkwekwe Mountain Gorilla Orphanage Center try to give the animals as much access as possible to their natural environment, but they inevitably exhibit "almost the same behavior as humans."
Senkwekwe is named after one of the wild silverback gorillas that was killed in Virunga in 2007.
The orphans need constant care, so the rangers live nearby and spend their days with them - feeding them, playing with them, keeping them company.
"Gorilla caretakers with those gorilla orphans, we are the same family," said head caretaker Andre Bauma.
He said without their own relatives nearby, the gorillas treat the rangers as their family.
"They know we are their mum. They are a member of the family. We are their friends," said Bauma.
Virunga is billed as Africa's most biodiverse national park, spanning tropical forests, snow-peaked mountains and active volcanoes.
It's also one of the last bastions of wild mountain gorilla populations. Parks in the mountains of Congo, Rwanda and Uganda have the last remaining mountain gorillas in their natural habitat.
But it's in eastern Congo, an area that has suffered from years of armed conflict.
Virunga's management has had to take extraordinary measures to keep its visitors safe from the on-and-off fighting in the region - protecting them with a highly trained guard of elite rangers and sniffer dogs, and working closely with communities surrounding the park.
After a park ranger was killed by gunmen and three foreign tourists were briefly held captive, the park closed until it could secure the safety of visitors. It reopened in mid-February this year.
But all this costs money, and the state park says it wouldn't be able to survive without private donations from visitors.
Virunga's management hopes the viral gorilla selfie will help boost the park's profile, and encourage more people to contribute to the vital work of conserving the mountain gorillas and their unique natural habitat.
AP journalist Khaled Kazziha in Nairobi, Kenya, contributed.
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