TOP  >  生物多様性センターの国際協力  >  ESABII  >  Database  >  Threatened Mammal Species Database  >  Trachypithecus poliocephalus



Trachypithecus poliocephalus

Taxonomy (Name)

Class MAMMALIAIUCN
Order DIPROTODONTIAIUCN
Family CERCOPITHECIDAEIUCN
Scientific Name Trachypithecus poliocephalusIUCN
Author (Pousargues, 1898)IUCN
Synonyms  
Common Name White-headed Langur, Cat Ba Langur, Golden-headed LangurIUCN
Local name Brunei Darussalam  
Cambodia  
China  
Indonesia  
Japan  
Lao PDR  
Malaysia  
Myanmar  
Mongolia  
Philippines  
Singapore  
Republic of Korea  
Thailand  
Vietnam  

 

Picture

 

 

Distribution, Range

This species is known only from northern Viet Nam and adjacent southern China.

T. p. poliocephalus
Confined to Cat Ba Island, in Ha Long Bay off the northeastern cost of Viet Nam. There it is further restricted to about a 100 km2 area of occupancy, mostly inside Cat Ba National Park (Stenke and Chu Xuan Canh 2004). It ranges from 70-100 m in elevation (Le and Campbell 1994) and possibly from 0 to 200 m.

T. p. leucocephalus
Occurs in south China (southwestern Guangxi province), in isolated areas from the Shiwan Dushan north to the Zuo River, specifically in the karst hills of Gang Nature Reserve, Fushui Nature Reserve, Chongzuo Nature Reserve, and Longrui Nature Reserve.

IUCN

Map

Country

Brunei Darussalam  
Cambodia  
China checkIUCN
Indonesia  
Japan  
Lao PDR  
Malaysia  
Myanmar  
Mongolia  
Philippines  
Singapore  
Republic of Korea  
Thailand  
Vietnam checkIUCN

 

Status

International Status

IUCN Red List Category

CRIUCN

Justification

Listed as Critically Endangered as there is reason to believe the species has declined by at least 80% over the past three generations (36 years, given a generation length of 12 years) due primarily to hunting and habitat loss.

IUCN

CITES

 

CMS

 

National Status

Country Category Reference
Brunei Darussalam    
Cambodia    
China    
Indonesia    
Japan    
Korea    
Lao PDR    
Malaysia    
Mongolia    
Myanmar    
Philippines    
Singapore    
Thailand    
Vietnam E(as Trachypithecus froncoisi poliocephalus) Red Data Book of Vietnam(2000)
(Endangered, Vulnerable, Rare, Threatened)

 

 

Ecology Discription

Appearance

 

Habitat

This species is associated with forests on limestone (karst) hills. The caves found in this habitat are thought to offer protection from predators and temperature extremes but, if accessible to people, this habitat is also where human hunters capture or kill sleeping langurs (Nadler et al. 2003). It is arboreal and terrestrial, and diurnal.

IUCN

Population size

The current total population of T. p. poliocephalus as of August 2006 is 64 individuals (Stenke pers. comm.), down from an estimated 100 individuals in 2000 (Nadler and Long 2000), but apparently an increase from the all-time low (less than 60 individuals) in the interim period. These animals are fragmented into seven isolated subpopulations; average group size is low, at 3.7 individuals, and there are 3-4 all-female groups, which are consequently non-reproductive (Stenke and Chu Xuan Canh 2004).

As of 2003, T. p. leucocephalus totaled about 700-800 individuals remaining in the wild, 250 of which live in Nong Gang, a maximum of 350 individuals live in Nong Lin. Also as of 2003, the population had begun to grow after a period of human-induced decline (Wang and Tong 2004). A survey conducted in Fusui Rare and Precious Animal Nature Reserve between September 1996 and April 1997, found a 24% decline in the population density over the past 10 years, with a current population of less than 150 langurs (Li et al. 2003).

IUCN

Behavior

 

Diet

Like other langurs, this species is mainly folivorous, with leaves making up between 60-80% of its diet; the rest is composed of shoots, fruit, flowers, and bark (Li et al. 2003).

IUCN

Reproduction

 

 

Threat

Major Threat(s)

Poaching, both for meat and traditional ?medicine,? has been recognized as the most severe threat to Cat Ba langurs, and the reason for the precipitous decline in their population over the past couple of decades. Reproductively valuable males were often the most common victims due to their behaviour (Stenke and Chu Xuan Canh 2004). Habitat disturbance and fragmentation resulting from the growing human population on Cat Ba Island (due in part to the country?s designation of the island as a new tourism centre for northern Viet Nam), and rampant fires due to honey collectors (Nadler and Long 2000) are also threats. Tourism in the inadequately managed Cat Ba National Park has direct effects on langur natural history, such as the disturbance to habitat and perhaps behaviour caused by things like nightly spotlighting trips in speed boats around the karst archipelago where these monkeys live. The small size and fragmented nature of the remaining Cat Ba langur population means that the subspecies is at risk of inbreeding effects (or intrinsic effects to avoid inbreeding by not breeding at all), extremely limited mate-choice due to the small number of males per group, and the chance of a natural or human disaster causing total or effective extinction.
In China, clearing of land with fire, burning of agricultural residue and burning charcoal often leads to uncontrolled fires that escape into adjacent karst landscapes. The white-headed Langur is surrounded in some areas by subsistence agriculture, such that much of the habitat is fragmented (Li and Rogers 2005). Tree cutting for firewood has caused further degradation to the remaining habitat (Li and Rogers 2005). Along with habitat destruction, poaching has been the primary cause of the most recent decline in the population (Wang and Tong 2004). There is some evidence that breeding is hindered in degraded habitats.

IUCN

 

Conservation and Measurement

International

This species is currently listed in CITES Appendix II. IUCN

National

 

Conservation law

Country Status Reference
Brunei Darussalam    
Cambodia    
China    
Indonesia    
Japan    
Korea    
Lao PDR    
Malaysia    
Mongolia    
Myanmar    
Philippines    
Singapore    
Thailand    
Vietnam Group I: Prohibiting Exploitation and Use for Commercial Purposes The Government Decree 32/2006/ND-CP, Dated 30th March 2006 on Management of Endangered, Precious and Rare Species of Wild Plants and Animals

 

Protected Area

The largest populations of T. p. leucocephalus are expected to recover under proper conservation of their Nong Guan and Nong Lin limestone habitats (Wang and Tong 2004). Nong Guan and Nong Lin are now being included in a larger proposed national-level nature reserve called Chongzuo Eco-Park, a special nature reserve for the white-headed langur (381 km2) with a population of about 250 individuals (Nadler 2003). However, considering the precarious status of the populations of this subspecies, reliable information is desperately needed about the precise effects of habitat degradation on its activity and survival (Li and Rogers 2005).

IUCN

Other Coservation Projects

Since November 2000, the subspecies T. p. poliocephalus and its habitat on Cat Ba have been the subject of the Cat Ba Langur Conservation Project (implemented by the Zoological Society for the Conservation of Species and Populations, ZSCSP), which has been focused on the improvement of protection status for the subspecies and its habitat, and has initiated two important programs. The first is a langur sanctuary located inside Cat Ba National Park and a 'buffer zone' of the World Heritage Site 'Halong Bay.' Thirty-five percent of the remaining population lives in the sanctuary. The second is a langur-guarding program that is meant to protect 35% of the population that exists outside of the national park. This program puts the subpopulations and their ranges under the control of local people that patrol the ranges and offer community conservation education. The most important steps in the recovery of this subspecies now are continued protection from poaching and encroachment, a reduction in the habitat fragmentation and subpopulation isolation, and an increase in reproductive output and genetic health of the entire population, suggesting the need for translocation (Stenke and Chu Xuan Canh 2004).

There are currently no specimens of T. p. leucocephalus in captivity; a small number of T. p. poliocephalus are reported in the collection of the Endangered Primate Rescue Center, Cuc Phuong National Park, Viet Nam (Nadler 1999).

IUCN

 

Citation

Burton, F. D., Snarr, K. A. and Harrison, S. E. 1995. Preliminary report on Presbytis francoisi leucocephalus. International Journal of Primatology 16(2): 311?329.

Groves, C. P. 2001. Primate taxonomy. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC, USA.

Jiang, H., Feng, M., Wang, J., Wu, M., Lai, Y. and Liu, Z. 1991. Distribution and ecological habitat of white-headed langur (Presbtyis leucocephalus). Acta Theriologica Sinica 11(3): 236?237.

Le, X. and Campbell, B. 1994. Population status of Trachypithecus francoisi poliocephalus in Cat Ba National Park. Asian Primates 3: 16?20.

Li. Z. 1993. Preliminary investigation of the habitats of Presbytis francoisi and Presbytis leucocephalus, with notes on the activity pattern of Presbytis leucocephalus. Folia Primatologica 60(1?2): 83?93.

Li, Z. 1999. Study of conservation biology on the white-headed langur, Presbytis leucocephalus, in China. American Society of Primatologists 23(2): 6.

Li, Z. and Rogers, E. 2005. Are limestone hills a refuge or essential habitat for white-headed langurs in Fusui, China? International Journal of Primatology 26(2): 437?452.

Nadler, T. 1999. Goldschopflangur (Trachypithecus poliocephalus) in Endangered Primate Rescue Center, Vietnam und die Bestandssituation in seinem Verbreitungsgebiet. Zoologische Garten 69(4): 241-245.

Nadler, T. 2003. Verbreitung und Bestand des Weisskopflangur (Trachypithecus poliocephalus leucocephalus). Zoologische Garten 73(5): 324-335.

Nadler, T. and Long, H. 2000. The Cat Bat langur: past, present and future. The definitive report on Trachypithecus poliocephalus, the world?s rarest primate, Frankfurt Zoological Society, Hanoi, Vietnam.

Nadler, T., Momberg, F., Nguyen Xuan Dang and Lormee, N. 2003. Vietnam Primate Conservation Status Review 2002. Part 2: Leaf Monkeys. Fauna and Flora International- Vietnam Program and Frankfurt Zoological Society, Hanoi, Vietnam.

Stenke, R. and Chu Xuan Canh. 2004. The golden-headed langur (Trachypithecus poliocepahlus) on Cat Ba Island ? status, threat factors and recovery options. In: T. Nadler, U. Streicher and Ha Thang Long (eds), Conservation of primates in Vietnam, Frankfurt Zoological Society, Hanoi, Vietnam.

Wang, D. and Tong, J. 2004. Current status of the white-headed langur (Trachypithecus poliocephalus leucocephalus): distribution, population structure and conservation. In: T. Nadler, U. Streicher and Ha Thang Long (eds), Conservation of Primates in Vietnam, pp. 115?116. Frankfurt Zoological Society, Hanoi, Vietnam.

IUCN