Social organization of Tonkin snub-nosed monkeys in northern Vietnam: ecological pressures and evolutionary implications.
Issued Date
2010
Resource Type
Language
eng
Rights
Mahidol University
Suggested Citation
Ramesh Boonratana, Le Xuan Canh (2010). Social organization of Tonkin snub-nosed monkeys in northern Vietnam: ecological pressures and evolutionary implications.. Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/10985
Title
Social organization of Tonkin snub-nosed monkeys in northern Vietnam: ecological pressures and evolutionary implications.
Author(s)
Other Contributor(s)
Abstract
The Tonkin snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus avunculus, is an endemic,critically endangered,slender-bodied arboreal colobine, whose distribution is largely restricted to the tropical evergreen forests associated with karst limestone hills and mountains in northern Vietnam. It has been recorded at
elevations between 200 to 1,200 m. The basic social unit of the Tonkin snubnosed monkey is a one-male unit (OMU), and extra males form all-male unit (AMU). Different OMUs and AMUs frequently come together to feed, rest, and
occasionally travel together, thereby exhibiting a secondary level of social organization – the band, with fission-fusion of stable OMUs. The Tonkin snubnosed monkey is wide-ranging, and the home ranges of different units overlap completely. The former suggests widely distributed food resources, and the
latter imply inter-group tolerance and the absence of defense for food resources.In 1993, a study of the Tonkin snub-nosed monkey at the Tat Ke Sector of the Na Hang Nature Reserve showed that the average size of the OMU was 17.7,and the band size was 72 (estimated 80). A latter study at the same site, carried
out in 2005, observed that the average size of the OMU was 5.6, and the band size was 17 (estimated 22). This significant drop in group and band sizes could only be attributed to hunting pressures, evidenced by both primary and secondary data. Furthermore, habitat cover has in fact increased within that 13-year period and food resources are likely to have similarly increased, therefore unlikely to account for the reduced sizes.
Description
The 23rd Congress of the International Primatological Society, Kyoto, Japan. September 12-18, 2010.