Vocal fingerprinting reveals a substantially smaller global population of the Critically Endangered cao vit gibbon (Nomascus nasutus) than previously thought

Author:

Wearn Oliver R.,Trinh-Dinh Hoang,Ma Chang-Yong,Khac Le Quyet,Nguyen Phuong,Van Hoang Tuan,Van Luong Chuyen,Van Hua Tru,Van Hoang Quan,Fan Peng-Fei,Duc Nguyen Tho

Abstract

AbstractThe cao vit gibbon (Nomascus nasutus) is one of the rarest primates on Earth and now only survives in a single forest patch of less than 5000 ha on the Vietnam–China border. Accurate monitoring of the last remaining population is critical to inform ongoing conservation interventions and track conservation success over time. However, traditional methods for monitoring gibbons, involving triangulation of groups from their songs, are inherently subjective and likely subject to considerable measurement errors. To overcome this, we aimed to use ‘vocal fingerprinting’ to distinguish the different singing males in the population. During the 2021 population survey, we complemented the traditional observations made by survey teams with a concurrent passive acoustic monitoring array. Counts of gibbon group sizes were also assisted with a UAV-mounted thermal camera. After identifying eight family groups in the acoustic data and incorporating long-term data, we estimate that the population was comprised of 74 individuals in 11 family groups, which is 38% smaller than previously thought. We have no evidence that the population has declined—indeed it appears to be growing, with new groups having formed in recent years—and the difference is instead due to double-counting of groups in previous surveys employing the triangulation method. Indeed, using spatially explicit capture-recapture modelling, we uncovered substantial measurement error in the bearings and distances from field teams. We also applied semi- and fully-automatic approaches to clustering the male calls into groups, finding no evidence that we had missed any males with the manual approach. Given the very small size of the population, conservation actions are now even more urgent, in particular habitat restoration to allow the population to expand. Our new population estimate now serves as a more robust basis for informing management actions and tracking conservation success over time.

Funder

Arcus Foundation

IUCN Save Our Species

Disney Conservation Fund

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference47 articles.

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3. Wearn, O. R. et al. Conservation Action Plan for the Cao Vit Gibbon (Nomascus nasutus) 2021—2030 with a Vision to 2050. (Fauna & Flora International—Vietnam Programme, Hanoi and IUCN SSC Conservation Planning Specialist Group, 2021).

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