Mentawai langur
Mentawai langur[1] | |
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Mammalia |
Order: | Primates |
Suborder: | Haplorhini |
Infraorder: | Simiiformes |
Family: | Cercopithecidae |
Genus: | Presbytis |
Species: | P. potenziani
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Binomial name | |
Presbytis potenziani (Bonaparte, 1856)
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Mentawai langur range |
The Mentawai langur (Presbytis potenziani) is a species of
Description
Mentawai langur infants are born with a white pelage. After two to three weeks, the pelage begins to darken and the face becomes darkly pigmented. This change of coloration begins in the dorsal midline and head and ends laterally. After three months, the belly and chest are dark reddish-brown, throat, cheeks, forehead and tip of tail are white and the rest of the body is jet black. Males are differentiated from females by having a white circumgenital patch of fur.[6] Mentawai langurs have a slender body with hind limbs longer than their forelimbs.[7]
Distribution and habitat
Mentawai langurs are endemic to the islands of
Behavior and diet
On average, groups of Mentawai langurs travel 540 metres (1,770 ft) each day.[11][2] Heavy rainfall affects movement patterns light to moderate rainfall does not. The langurs move by quadrupedal running and climbing; they also leap in the mid and upper portions of the canopy and drop when nearer to the ground.[11] Home ranges vary from 11 to 40 hectares (27 to 99 acres).[7] The groups are not migrants.[clarification needed][2] Their social organisation is variable: unimale-unifemale, unimale-multifemale, multimale-multifemale.[2]
Mentawai langurs spend more than 80% of their time resting and foraging and only a small portion traveling and conducting social behavior. Such extensive periods of resting and foraging are required for colobines that consume seeds, unripe fruits and leaves to support their digestion.[7] Adult males typically move away from the group in the early morning and give long calls.[11]
The langurs feed in the upper portion of the canopy. In some areas, their diet consists of 55% leaves, 32% fruit and seed and 13% other source of food such as flowers, bark, sap, and fungi.[11] but groups that forage in secondary forests have a diet of 70% fruits and seeds and up to 35% "climber" type vegetation.[clarification needed][2] The niche breadth of Presbytis potenziani is 0.22, based on Levin's index.[7]
Conservation
The Mentawai langur is currently listed as
References
- OCLC 62265494.
- ^ . Retrieved 14 November 2021.
- ^ "Appendices | CITES". cites.org. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
- ^ "Presbytis siberu". American Society of Mammalogists. Retrieved 2020-04-08.
- PMID 21333742. Retrieved 2020-04-08.
- JSTOR 1379453.
- ^ S2CID 11087889.
- ^ S2CID 85765480.
- ^ S2CID 25252841.
- S2CID 208530127.
- ^ ISSN 2088-9771.