Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Yellow cheeked gibbon

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Kingdom
  
Order
  
Family
  
Hylobatidae

Scientific name
  
Nomascus gabriellae

Rank
  
Species

Phylum
  
Chordata

Superfamily
  
Hominoidea

Genus
  
Nomascus

Higher classification
  
Nomascus

Yellow-cheeked gibbon httpsc1staticflickrcom650605518920429b255

Similar
  
Nomascus, Gibbon, Northern white‑cheeked gibbon, Black Crested Gibbon, Primate

Yellow cheeked gibbons


The yellow-cheeked gibbon (Nomascus gabriellae), also called the golden-cheeked gibbon, yellow-cheeked crested gibbon, the golden-cheeked crested gibbon, red-cheeked gibbon, or the buffed-cheeked gibbon, is a species of gibbon native to Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia.

Contents

Yellow-cheeked gibbon Yellowcheeked gibbon aka goldencheeked gibbon yellowcheeked

The yellow-cheeked gibbon is born blond and later turns black. Males carry this colouring through their lifespan and have the distinguishing golden cheeks. Females are born blonde to blend into their mother's fur but they later turn black. Females turn back to blond at sexual maturity, keeping only a black cap on the top of their heads.

Yellow-cheeked gibbon Yellowcheeked gibbon Wikipedia

This diurnal and arboreal gibbon lives in primary tropical forest, foraging for fruits, using brachiation to move through the trees.

Yellow-cheeked gibbon Fact sheet Yellowcheeked crested gibbon Nomascus gabriellae

The yellow-cheeked gibbon, like all gibbon species, has a unique song, which is usually initiated by the male. The female will then join in and sing with the male to reinforce their bond and announce to other gibbons that they are a pair in a specific territory. The male usually finishes the song after the female has stopped singing.

Yellow-cheeked gibbon goudwanggibbon Nomascus gabriellae buffcheeked gibbonyellow

Little is known about this species in the wild, but it is thought that it has a life span of approximately 46 years.

Saigon yellow cheeked gibbon monkey


Conservation and rehabilitation

A large protected wild population can be found in Cat Tien National Park: where a collaboration with the Endangered Asian Species Trust (UK), and Pingtung Wildlife Rescue Centre (Taiwan) founded the Dao Tien Endangered Primate Species Centre, which specialises on the rescue, rehabilitation and release of N. gabriellae and other endangered primates.

A recent report by the Wildlife Conservation Society counted 2,500 yellow-cheeked crested gibbons in Cambodia’s Seima Biodiversity Conservation Area, an estimate that represents the largest known population of the species in the world.

References

Yellow-cheeked gibbon Wikipedia


Similar TopicsGibbon
Nomascus
Primate