All Species Animalia

Nomascus gabriellae (Thomas, 1909) is a animal in the Hylobatidae family, order Primates, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Nomascus gabriellae (Thomas, 1909) (Nomascus gabriellae (Thomas, 1909))
Animalia

Nomascus gabriellae (Thomas, 1909)

Nomascus gabriellae (Thomas, 1909)

The yellow-cheeked gibbon is a colored fur-changing gibbon species native to Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia.

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Family
Genus
Nomascus
Order
Primates
Class
Mammalia

About Nomascus gabriellae (Thomas, 1909)

Nomenclature

The yellow-cheeked gibbon (Nomascus gabriellae) has several alternate common names: golden-cheeked gibbon, yellow-cheeked crested gibbon, golden-cheeked crested gibbon, red-cheeked gibbon, and buffed-cheeked gibbon. It is a species of gibbon native to Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. The species was discovered and named in honor of British naturalist Gabrielle Maud Vassal.

Infant Fur Color

Yellow-cheeked gibbons are born with blond fur, and later darken to black.

Male Adult Coloration

Males retain this black coloration for their entire lives, and have distinct golden cheeks.

Female Fur Development

Females are born blond to blend in with their mother's fur, then turn black as they mature, before turning back to blond when they reach sexual maturity. Adult females only retain a black cap of fur on the top of their heads.

Activity and Habitat

This is a diurnal, arboreal gibbon that lives in primary tropical forest.

Foraging and Locomotion

It forages for fruit, and moves through the tree canopy using brachiation.

Lifespan

Little information is available about this species in its wild habitat, but it is thought to have an approximate lifespan of 46 years.

Vocalization Timing

Groups of yellow-cheeked gibbons vocalize loudly early in the morning.

Song Function

Their songs likely function to defend resources including territories, food-bearing trees, and breeding partners, and may also help attract potential mates.

Mated Pair Duets

Mated pairs perform coordinated duets, which include phrases that are specific to each sex.

Photo: (c) Next Continent: Wildlife, Photography and Natural History Tours, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Next Continent: Wildlife, Photography and Natural History Tours · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Mammalia Primates Hylobatidae Nomascus

More from Hylobatidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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