Positional behavior and canopy use of black snub-nosed monkeys Rhinopithecus strykeri in the Gaoligong Mountains, Yunnan, China

Author:

Yang Yin123,Youlatos Dionisios4ORCID,Behie Alison M2,Belbeisi Roula Al4,Huang Zhipang13,Tian Yinping5,Wang Bin5,Zhou Linchun5,Xiao Wen13

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Eastern Himalaya Biodiversity Research, Dali University, Dali, Yunnan 671003, China

2. School of Archaeology and Anthropology, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia

3. International Centre of Biodiversity and Primate Conservation, Dali University, Dali, Yunnan 671003, China

4. Department of Zoology, School of Biology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, GR-54124, Greece

5. Lushui Bureau of Gaoligongshan National Nature Reserve, Liuku, Yunnan 673229, China

Abstract

Abstract Studies on positional behavior and canopy use are essential for understanding how arboreal animals adapt their morphological characteristics and behaviors to the challenges of their environment. This study explores canopy and substrate use along with positional behavior in adult black snub-nosed monkeys Rhinopithecus strykeri, an endemic, critically endangered primate species in Gaoligong Mountains, southwest China. Using continuous focal animal sampling, we collected data over a 52-month period and found that R. strykeri is highly arboreal primarily using the high layers of the forest canopy (15–30 m), along with the terminal zone of tree crowns (52.9%), medium substrates (41.5%), and oblique substrates (56.8%). We also found sex differences in canopy and substrate use. Females use the terminal zones (56.7% versus 40.4%), small/medium (77.7% versus 60.1%), and oblique (59.9% versus 46.5%) substrates significantly more than males. On the other hand, males spend more time on large/very large (39.9% versus 22.3%) and horizontal (49.7% versus 35.2%) substrates. Whereas both sexes mainly sit (84.7%), and stand quadrupedally (9.1%), males stand quadrupedally (11.5% versus 8.3%), and bipedally (2.9% versus 0.8%) more often than females. Clamber, quadrupedalism, and leap/drop are the main locomotor modes for both sexes. Rhinopithecus strykeri populations never enter canopies of degenerated secondary forest and mainly use terminal branches in the middle and upper layers of canopies in intact mid-montane moist evergreen broadleaf forest and hemlock coniferous broadleaf mixed forests across their habitat.

Funder

National Science Foundation of China

Zoological Society for the Conservation of Species and Populations

Australian National University Fieldwork Funding for Higher Degree Research Students

Young talents program of ten thousand talents plan of Yunnan

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology

Reference57 articles.

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