词条 | gibbon |
释义 | gibbon primate ![]() ![]() Most gibbon species are about 40–65 cm (16–26 inches) in head and body length, but the siamang (Hylobates syndactylus) can grow up to 90 cm. The smaller species (both sexes) weigh about 5.5 kg (12 pounds); others, such the concolor gibbon, weigh about 7.5 kg. The female siamang weighs 10.5 kg and the male 12 kg; the siamang is the only gibbon with a significant size difference between the sexes. The various species of gibbons can be divided into four groups; molecular data indicate that the four groups are as different from one another as chimpanzees are from humans and thus should probably be classified as four genera. The lars, a group of six or seven species, are the smallest and have the densest body hair. The dark-handed gibbon (H. agilis), which lives on Sumatra south of Lake Toba and on the Malay Peninsula between the Perak and Mudah rivers, may be either tan or black and has white facial markings. The white-handed gibbon (H. lar), of northern Sumatra and most of the Malay Peninsula northward through Thailand into Yunnan, China, is similar but has white extremities. The pileated gibbon (H. pileatus), of southeastern Thailand and western Cambodia, has white hands and feet; the male is black and the female buff with a black cap and chest patch. The difference in colour comes about with age; the juveniles are buff and both sexes darken with age, but the male does so much more rapidly. Kloss's gibbon (H. klossii), from the Mentawai Islands west of Sumatra, is completely black throughout its life. The sexes look alike in the silvery gibbon (H. moloch) of Java and in the white-bearded (H. albibarbis) and Müller's (H. muelleri) gibbons, both from different parts of Borneo. In the concolor group both sexes are black as juveniles, but the females lighten to buff with maturity, so that the two sexes look quite different as adults. The males have an upstanding tuft of hair on top of the head and a small inflatable throat sac. All species live east of the Mekong River. The black crested gibbon (H. concolor) is found from southern China into northernmost Vietnam and Laos; the northern concolor (H. leucogenys) and southern concolor (H. siki) gibbons are found farther south, and the red-cheeked gibbon (H. gabriellae) lives in southern Vietnam and eastern Cambodia. ![]() Gibbons are still widely distributed in the rainforests (rainforest) and monsoon forests (monsoon forest) of Southeast Asia, but they are more and more under threat as their forest habitat is destroyed. They are sometimes hunted for food, but more often they are killed for their supposed medicinal properties; their long arm bones are especially prized. |
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