TOPICS BONOBO Chimpanzee "Ai" Crania photos Itani Jun'ichiro archives Open datasets for behavioral analysis Guidelines for Care and Use of Nonhuman Primates(pdf) Study material catalogue/database Guideline for field research of non-human primates 2019(pdf) Primate Genome DB ![]()
Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University Copyright (c) |
Chen / Poster Ecology of the black-crested gibbon (Hylobates concolor) in the Ailao Mt.Reserve, Yunnan, China N. Chen National Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology
National Science and Technology Development Agency of Thailand A study focusing on the
field ecology and behavior of wild black-crested gibbons (Hylobates concolor) was carried
out in the Ailao Mt. Reserve, Yunnan Province, People's Republic of China from April 1991
to June 1993. The black-crested gibbon is a highly distinctive member of its family in
that it is probably polygamous (Haimoff et al. 1987, Bleisch & Chen, 1991) while other
gibbon species live in small monogamous groups (Leighton, 1987). Their habitat is unique
among gibbons. The annual mean temperature is only 10.1 °C. The coldest month, December,
has a mean temperature of 3.6 °C. Annual evaporation is 1383.8mm, while annual
precipitation is 1530.4mm. Over the course of one year, snowfall was recorded on six days.
The canopy was continuous and low with a mean height of 23.9m (n=110, s=0.6). All 2,349
trees with DBH >=10cm in three 100m x100m plots were measured and identified. DBH
averaged 24.1cm (N=2,349 s = 15.7). The trees and the 89 large woody climbers in the three
1-ha plots were found to belong to 59 species of 24 families. Fagaceae (619 trees) and
Theaceae (444 trees) represented the largest families. The five most abundant species
accounted for 1,018 trees. No trees of the genus Ficus were found. Ripe fruits were
available only from August to November, for a total of 12 weeks (N = 25 species, s=2.17). Bleisch, W. & Chen, N. (1991) : Ecology and behavior of wild black-crested gibbons
(Hylobates concolor) in China with a reconsideration of evidence for polygyny. Primates
32(4) : 539 - 548 |