China Daily

New ape species

Chinese scientists reclassify rare gibbon

- By LI YINGQING in Kunming and CHEN LIANG in Beijing

Chinese scientists announced on Thursday in Kunming, Yunnan province, that less than 200 hoolock gibbons distribute­d in the province are actually an entirely new species, known as the Gaoligong hoolock gibbon (Hoolock tianxing).

In the past few years, two subspecies of hoolocks have been reclassifi­ed as species of their own — Western hoolock gibbons and Eastern hoolock gibbons. The newly announced species was originally considered an isolated population of Eastern hoolock gibbons.

As the first ape species ever named by Chinese scientists, tianxing, which means “heaven’s movement” or “skywalking” in Chinese, are also known as Skywalker hoolock gibbons.

An internatio­nal team of scientists led by Fan Pengfei, one of China’s leading primatolog­ists from Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, identified the new species and announced their discovery in a paper published on Wednesday in the American Journal of Primatolog­y, a monthly peerreview­ed science journal.

In 2007, Fan and his colleagues began studying Eastern hoolock gibbons. Between 2008 and 2009, they conducted a comprehens­ive survey in Yunnan province and began regularly monitoring three hoolock population­s, accumulati­ng a large number of photos of the ape.

“Studying the photos closely, I found that gibbons in China don’t have white beards or white fur around their eyes, and they have thin eyebrows with a wider space between them,” Fan said. “Male Skywalker hoolocks have black or brown fur in their pubic region. Their features are different to Eastern hoolocks.”

According to Fan, all hoolock gibbons have white eyebrows and some have white beards, but Skywalker hoolocks have distinctiv­e downturned brows that stand out against the black fur on their head.

In2010,Fanmadeare­search plan and invited more scientists to join the project. A comprehens­ive study of the genetic characteri­stics of wild gibbons and museum specimens, and assessment of coat color patterns and tooth morphology followed.

Finally, 15 members of the research team concluded that the population of hoolocks distribute­d to the east of the Irrawaddy and Nmai Hka rivers are actually morphologi­cally and geneticall­y different to Eastern hoolock gibbons distribute­d west of the rivers, and are a new ape.

According to Jiang Xuelong, a professor at the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Kunming Institute of Zoology and co-author of the paper, Skywalker hoolocks are scattered in fragmented forests in the Gaoligong Mountains in Baoshan,

I found that gibbons in China don’t have white beards or white fur around their eyes, and they have thin eyebrows.” Fan Pengfei, primatolog­ist at Sun Yat-sen University

Tengchong county and Yingjiang county. They are distribute­d at between 500 meters and 2,700 meters above sea level.

With a population in China of less than 200 and an unknown population in Myanmar, which is “probably much smaller because of limited distributi­on areas”, Jiang said that the team has called fortheInte­rnationalU­nionfor Conservati­on of Nature and Natural Resources to classify gibbons as endangered.

“In the past 20 years, the gibbon disappeare­d from several of its historical distributi­ng areas in Yunnan,” Jiang said. “Fortunatel­y, half of the present population are living within the Gaoligong National Nature Reserve, where they have already been put under better protection.” Contact the writers at chenliang@ chinadaily.com.cn

 ??  ??
 ?? ZHAO CHAO / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A white-browed gibbon lives in the Gaoligong National Nature Reserve in Southwest China’s Yunnan province.
ZHAO CHAO / FOR CHINA DAILY A white-browed gibbon lives in the Gaoligong National Nature Reserve in Southwest China’s Yunnan province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong