Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Gee's golden langur is currently endangered with a decreasing population trend; the total population of mature adults has been estimated as 6000–6500. [27] It is one of the most endangered primate species of India and Bhutan. [ 28 ]
Population was estimated at over 2,000 in the late 1950s. [1] Eastern black crested gibbon: ... Gee's golden langur: Trachypithecus geei: 6,000–6,500 [47] EN [47]
Wildlife population. ... This list of mammals of India comprises all the mammal species alive in India today. ... Gee's golden langur (Trachypithecus geei ...
Kashmir gray langur; François' langur; Gee's golden langur; Germaine's lutung; Hatinh langur; Phayre's leaf monkey; Shortridge's langur; Purple-faced langur; Subspecies.
The various species alive today then diverged during the ... Shortridge's langur, Trachypithecus shortridgei; Gee's golden langur, ... Gee's golden langur. T. geei
Edward Pritchard Gee (1904–1968) was a Cambridge educated, Anglo-Indian [3] tea-planter and an amateur naturalist in Assam, India.He is credited with the 1953 discovery of Gee's golden langur.
The Cat Ba langur (Trachypithecus poliocephalus), also known as the golden-headed langur, is a critically endangered species of langur endemic to Cát Bà Island, Vietnam.It is among the rarest primates in the world, and possibly the rarest primate in Asia, with population size estimated at less than 70 individuals.
The larger gray langurs are rivals for the largest species of monkey found in Asia. The average weight of gray langurs is 18 kg (40 lb) in the males and 11 kg (24 lb) in the females. [7] Langurs mostly walk quadrupedally and spend half of their time on the ground and the other half in trees.