Neha Patil (Editor)

Yakushima macaque

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Kingdom
  
Animalia

Class
  
Mammalia

Family
  
Cercopithecidae

Rank
  
Subspecies

Phylum
  
Chordata

Order
  
Primates

Genus
  
Macaca

Yakushima macaque httpsc1staticflickrcom8777118388197021028

Similar
  
Japanese macaque, Moor macaque, Pagai Island macaque, Turkestan lynx, Mexican bobcat

Social grooming behaviour of yakushima macaque macaca fuscata yakui


The Yakushima macaque (Macaca fuscata yakui) is a subspecies of Japanese monkey which is indigenous to Yakushima Island (Kagoshima Prefecture). It is also known as the Yaku macaque.

Contents

Yakushima macaque www yakushimaexperience com


Characteristics

Compared with M. f. fuscata which lives from Honshu to Shikoku and Kyushu, Japan, these individuals are smaller, stockier, have black hands and feet, and a thicker gray coat.

Adults have darker fur than infants and juveniles. Adult males have a special feature called a “momoware” (split peach) which parts their hair in the center from right to left.

Females bear a single offspring between March and May, every two years. Troop size is generally less than 50 individuals.

The Yakushima macaque population in Yakushima Island lies at the southern limit of Japanese macaque's distribution. The current population is estimated to be somewhere between 9,504–18,890 animals, according to a survey completed in 1999.

Human interactions

In the past in Yakushima, when food supplies for macaques became short, the monkeys would encroach on human habitation and damage crops; 400–500 Yakushima macaques were caught and exterminated every year due to the damage done to the Ponkan and Tankan orange crops for which Yakushima is especially noted.

The reason may be because the monkeys' broadleaf tree habitat declined due to logging and replacement of the broadleaves with conifers. Nowadays, Yakushima residents aim to coexist by protecting their crops with electric fences, rather than exterminating the macaques.

Protected status

According to the Ministry of the Environment's Red List of endangered species, the Yakushima macaque was judged “a rare species” in 1991 and “a quasi-endangered species” in 1998. But it was removed from the list in 2007 due to an increase in population. A species of Japanese monkey also inhabited Tanegashima, an island near Yakushima, until the 1950s, when it became extinct. Whether those monkeys were Hondo macaques or Yakushima macaques is unknown.

References

Yakushima macaque Wikipedia