* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Nasalis larvatus
Survey
Document related concepts
Mission blue butterfly habitat conservation wikipedia , lookup
Behavioral ecology wikipedia , lookup
Biodiversity action plan wikipedia , lookup
Conservation movement wikipedia , lookup
Angraecum sesquipedale wikipedia , lookup
Biological Dynamics of Forest Fragments Project wikipedia , lookup
Transcript
Mammalian Species 47(926):84–99 Nasalis larvatus (Primates: Colobini) Lee E. Harding SciWrite Environmental Sciences Ltd., 2339 Sumpter Drive, Coquitlam, British Columbia, Canada V3J 6Y3; [email protected] Abstract: Nasalis larvatus (von Wurmb, 1781), proboscis monkey, is the only member of its genus and is the largest colobine monkey. It has a uniquely large nose in males. It occurs in lowland riverine forests, peat swamps, and mangrove swamps of Borneo. It is a strong swimmer and can swim underwater. A folivore, it lives in single male-multifemale troops or all-male groups, in a multilevel social system. Male dispersal is routine and females commonly transfer among groups. It is listed as “Endangered” by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources and is included in Appendix 1 of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora. Key words: bekantan, Borneo, colobine, odd-nosed, proboscis monkey, Pygathrix, Rhinopithecini, Rhinopithecus © 2015 by American Society of Mammalogists Synonymy completed 2 July 2012 DOI:10.1093/mspecies/sev009 Nomenclatural statement.—A life science identifier (LSID) number was obtained for this publication: urn:lsid:zoobank. org:pub:25D283FD-2FB1-450A-B483-7B2AE10345C4 www.mammalogy.org Nasalis É. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, 1812 Simia Linnaeus, 1758:25. Simia suppressed by Opinion 114 (International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature 1929). Cercopithecus Linnaeus, 1758:26. Type species Simia diana Linnaeus 1758:26 by subsequent designation (Stiles and Orleman 1926); Cercopithecus validated by Opinion 238 (International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature 1954). Nasalis É. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, 1812:90. Type species Cercopithecus larvatus von Wurmb (1781) by monotypy. Hanno Gray, 1821:297. Replacement name. Rhinolazon Gloger, 1841:XXVII, 36. Replacement name. Rhynchopithecus Dahlbom, 1856:91. Type species Rhynchopithecus larvatus Dahlbom 1856:93 by monotypy; replacement name. Context and Content. Order Primates, suborder Haplorrhini, infraorder Simiformes, superfamily Cercopithecoidea, family Cercopithecidae, subfamily Colobinae, tribe Rhinopithecini. Nasalis is monotypic. Nasalis larvatus (von Wurmb, 1781) Proboscis Monkey Simia nasica Schreber, 1775:46, plates 10B and 10C. Type locality not specified. Nomen oblitum (see “Nomenclatural Notes”). Cercopithecus larvatus von Wurmb, 1781:145. Type locality Indonesia, West Kalimantan, “Pontiana, West Borneo” (Pontianak). Fig. 1.—Nasalis larvatus female (above) and male (below). Photographs by Lee Harding. 84 47(926)—Nasalis larvatus mammalian species85 S[imia]. Cercopithecus capistratus, Kerr 1792:No. 56. Type locality not specified. Simia nasalis: Shaw, 1800:55. Name combination. Cercopithecus nasica: Latreille, 1801:283. Name combination. Nasalis larvatus: É. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, 1812:91. First use of current name combination. Nomen protectum (see “Nomenclatural Notes”). Cercopithecus nasicus: Desmarest, 1817:574. Name combination. Cercopithecus (Nasalis) nasicus: Desmarest, 1820:55. Name combination. Semnopithecus nasicus: Desmoulins, 1825:570. Name combination. Nasalis recurvus Vigors and Horsfield, 1828:109. Type locality “Borneo.” Based on a juvenile specimen of N. larvatus. Semnopithecus larvata: Fischer, 1829:16. Name combination. Semnopithecus larvatus: Martin, 1841:453. Name combination. Rhynchopithecus nasalis: Dahlbom, 1856:93, table II. Name combination. Semnopithecus (Nasalis) larvatus: Anderson, 1878:42. Name combination. Nasalis larvatus orientalis Chasen, 1940:84. Type locality Indonesia: East Kalimantan, “Bulungan, North-East Borneo.” Context and Content. As for genus. Nasalis larvatus has contained 2 named subspecies, Nasalis larvatus larvatus von Wurmb, 1781, stripe-naped proboscis monkey of Borneo except probably northeast Kalimantan and N. l. orientalis Chasen, 1940, plain-naped proboscis monkey of northeast Kalimantan (Brandon-Jones et al. 2004). Neither is currently recognized (Groves 2005). Nomenclatural Notes. Several authors (e.g., Geoffroy SaintHilaire 1812; Lesson 1834; Martin 1837; Gervais 1854) refer to Louis Jean-Marie Daubenton’s description of “le nasique,” read to the Institut National des Sciences et Arts sometime after 1766 and before 1781, as the basis for nasica, nasicus, and, ultimately, Nasalis. This paper was apparently never published, however (see Harding 2012 for a discussion of it) and the non-Linnaean name would not be available for nomenclatural purposes in any case. Von Wurmb (1781:145) misspelled Cercopithecus (“Cercopheticus”). Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire (1812) and others ascribed the 1st description of “Simia nasica” to von Schreber (1775:46, plates 10B and 10C). Bowdich (1821:18), for example, remarked, “There is a large Guenon (Simia Nasica, Schreber) which is remarkable for an excessively long nose, in the form of a notched spatula. It is found in Borneo, ...Wurmb first transported this animal, of which Buffon was ignorant,…” However, nasica may rank as a nomen oblitum under Article 23.9, Reversal of Precedence because (Article 23.9.1.1) it has not been used as a valid name since before 1899; and (Article 23.9.1.2) larvatus has been used as the presumed valid name in > 25 works, published by > 10 authors, in the past 50 years. This qualifies larvatus as a nomen protectum. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire’s (1812) use of “nasica” as the root of Nasalis recognizes both von Schreber’s and Daubenton’s contributions. Simia nasalis has been wrongly attributed to Linnaeus (1758), who did not mention this species. Likewise, Gmelin (1788), editor of the 13th edition of Linneaus’ Systema Naturæ, is sometimes cited as the authority for S. nasalis, but this species is not mentioned in that edition. Similarly, S. nasica has been attributed to Lacépède (1799) and Audebert (1800), whose publications succeeded von Schreber’s (1775). Kerr (1792:No. 55), a translation of Gmelin’s 13th edition of Linnaeus’ Systema Naturæ, but enhanced with many additional species, described Simia (Cercopithecus) nasuus. However, “nasuus” appears to have been either a mistranslation or misprint from von Schreber (1775), as Elliot (1913) and others evidently assume when writing it as Simia (Cercopithecus) nasicus Kerr. Allen (1895) noted that Kerr (1792:No. 56) also listed a Cercopithecus capistratus as a synonym for S. (C.) nasutus [= larvatus]. Vigors and Horsfield (1828:109) named a specimen Nasalis recurvus as a 2nd species of Nasalis, but Gray (1850:2) reported that “Capt. Sir Edward Belcher brought home a young specimen of this species [Nasalis larvatus], showing that N. recurvus is only the young of the common species.” Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire (1829) included Nasalis in Semnopithecus. Pryer (1881:398) is sometimes given as an authority for “S[emnopithecus] nasalis,” which he discusses with considerable uncertainty as to “... whether [he has] found a new species of Monkey or not...” and gives no detailed description. Although Groves (1970) and others have included the simakobou, Simias concolor Miller, 1903 (endemic to the Mentawai Islands) in Nasalis, Groves (2001) and others restored Simias to generic rank. However, Whittaker et al. (2006), based on cytochrome b and adjacent RNA genes, conclude that the genetic differences between Nasalis and Simias are slight enough to warrant congeneric status, although they do not recommend this change for conservation reasons. Its name is bekantan in Indonesian and rasong in Malay; in Malay, an obsolete name, orang belinda, referred to the similarity of its large nose to those of Dutch people—possibly to the amusement of von Wurmb. DIAGNOSIS Nasalis larvatus, the largest colobine, is also the most sexually dimorphic. Mean mass of females is 10.0 kg, n = 14 and for males is 21.2, n = 13 (Oates et al. 1994). Both genders have uniquely large noses (Fig. 1); the mature males, which is pendulous and hangs below the mouth, can reach 17.5 cm in length (Buffon and Sonnini 1799). It is the only Southeast Asian colobine with reddish-brown dorsal fur, a darker crown, creamy pale belly, and gray legs, hands, and tail (Fig. 1). N. larvatus is the only cercopithecid in which the length of the femur plus tibia is longer than the skeletal trunk length (Ankel-Simons 2000). 86 mammalian species47(926)—Nasalis larvatus GENERAL CHARACTERS Nasalis larvatus shares many cranial, dental, and postcranial features such as body size and limb proportions with snub-nosed monkeys (Rhinopithecus), duoc-langurs (Pygathrix), simakobou or pig-tailed langur (Simias concolor), and the fossil Eurasian colobine Mesopithecus, suggesting a common inheritance (Peng et al. 1993; Peng and Pan 1994; Jablonski 1998). Pan et al. (2004) suggested placing these 5 genera into a tribe, the Rhinopithecini. Alternatively, they are referred to as the “odd-nosed” clade, the Rhinopithecus clade, or the Rhinopithecus complex (Jablonski 1998; Sterner et al. 2006; Whittaker et al. 2006; Roos et al. 2011). These common features contrast with the analogous features of the surilis (Presbytis), lutungs (Trachypithecus), and south-Asian langurs (henceforth, langurs), Semnopithecus, collectively called the Presbytini (Groves 2001). The skull dimensions (mm) of Elliot’s (1913) example, an adult male, were: total length 135, occipitonasal length 111, intertemporal width 45, zygomatic width 95, median length of nasals 24, palatal length 45, length of upper molar series 33, length of mandible 94, and length of lower molar series 45.5. Fitch (2000) found a maximum occipitonasal length of 143 mm in a sample of 33 adults and juvenile skulls. Relative brain size (cube root of brain volume divided by basicranial length) is 0.76 (Spoor 1997). Mean cranial capacity is 102 cm3 (n = 10) in adult males and 85 cm3 (n = 15) in adult females (Schultz 1942). Head and body length is 660–762 mm for males and 533– 609 mm for females; tail length is 559–762 mm for both genders (Nowak 1999). The mean relative length of the tail (as a percentage of trunk length) is 156.6% (range 143–167%, n = 10) for males and 152.3% (range 139–169%, n = 15) for females (Schultz 1942). Bismark (2010) gives mean mass (kg) of subadults as 6.7, young 3.5, and infants 1.5. N. larvatus has a relatively stout chest, shorter tail, and longer upper limbs than langurs and the long-tailed macaque, Macaca fascicularis (Schultz 1942). The dark cap, which is flat with prominent whorls, together with swept-back cheeks, “frame[s] the flesh to terra-cotta face” (Chaplin and Jablonski 1998:89). The skin on the smallish ischial callosities and on the bottom of the hands and feet is black. The facial skin of infants is bluish and their skin and fur do not contrast with those of adults, as in the Presbytini (Jablonski 1998). Not surprisingly, the skull of N. larvatus (Fig. 2) has specialized features to support the huge nose, such as the external nasal cartilages (Maier 2000). Nasalis is the only colobine genus with a narrow, cercopithecine-like interorbital pillar (Delson 1994). Craniometrically, N. larvatus clusters separately from the other Asian colobines except for simakobou, mainly due to its long, narrow nasal structure, a long muzzle, and a back-tilted ascending ramus; and its sexual dimorphism pattern is different from the other odd-nosed colobines and more broadly similar to langurs (Groves and Thorington 1970; Pan and Groves 2004). Compared to snub-nosed monkeys, N. larvatus has narrower nasal bones, narrower premaxillae, reduced breadth of the bony elements of the hard palate, a longer aspect ratio of the molars, Fig. 2.—Dorsal, ventral, and lateral views of skull and lateral view of mandible of an adult male Nasalis larvatus. Occipitonasal length is 133 mm. Photographed by Phil Myers, Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan; used with permission of the photographer. First published by http://animaldiversity.org. and greater depth of the mandible and the midface between the inferior margin of the orbit and the maxillary alveoli (Jablonski 1998). Schultz (1942) gives the following metrics for adults: mean intermembral index 121.2 (range 119–125, n = 10) for males, 121.0 (range 119–124, n = 15) for females; crural index 88.1 (range 84–91, n = 10) for males, 87.7 (range 86–90, n = 15) 47(926)—Nasalis larvatus mammalian species87 Fig. 3.—Nasalis larvatus is endemic to the island of Borneo in Brunei, the Malaysian states of Sarawak and Sabah and the Indonesian states of Daerah Tingkat I Kalimantan Barat, Kalimantan Tengah, Kalimantan Selatan, and Kalimantan Timur, collectively shown as Kalimantan. Some place names mentioned in the text are shown. Based on Meijaard and Nijman (2000a) and Sha et al. (2008). for females; and brachial index 100.3 (range 98–102, n = 10) for males, 99.5 (range 94–102, n = 15) for females. DISTRIBUTION Nasalis larvatus is endemic to Borneo and small islands near the coast of Borneo and is distributed throughout in suitable habitat, that is, along lowland rivers, near-shore islands, and coastal mangrove swamps, except where populations have become extirpated (Fig. 3). FOSSIL RECORD No fossils of Nasalis are known. Harrison (1996, 2000) and Harrison et al. (2006) note the absence of Nasalis material in both the paleontological and archaeological records of Sundaland. T. Harrison (in litt.) suggests that their absence, “... may be a question of sampling... [also] their preference for mangrove swamp and riverine environments may be a factor in their absence from Niah [Cave],” a mountain-side site with fossils of many other primate species including humans, Homo sapiens. Harrison et al. (2006) suggest that N. larvatus was probably already present on Borneo as an endemic taxon in the Late Pliocene and that the last common ancestor of it and simakobou had arrived in the Sunda islands by the early Pliocene. A recent find of Mesopithecus in Yunnan suggests this area as the center of evolution and radiation of the odd-nosed clade (Jablonski et al. 2011). FORM AND FUNCTION Form.—The dental formula of Nasalis larvatus is i 2/2, c 1/1, p 2/2, m 3/3, total 32 (Elliot 1913). The vertebral formula is 7 C, 12 T, 7 L, 3 S, 25 Ca, total 54 and shows a “remarkable scarcity of numerical variations among the presacral vertebrae [compared to] anthropoid apes” (Schultz 1942:299). Nasalis larvatus, a foregut fermenter, has the smallest stomach and largest small intestine of the colobines, implying a low need for fermenting capacity (compared to the more folivorous langurs) and higher absorbing capacity (Chivers 1994). Like snub-nosed monkeys and duoc-langurs, N. larvatus has a distinct presaccus at the forestomach, giving the stomach 4 parts, in contrast to the tripartite stomach of the Presbytini (Caton 1998). The colon weight and surface area are high relative to other colobines (Chivers 1994). The placenta is bidiscoid with anterior and posterior lobes and the umbilical cord of one was 15 cm; the mother’s adrenal glands were larger than the kidneys, with an adrenal:kidney mass ratio of about 1.18 (Soma and Benirchke 1977). Youlatos et al. (2012) found that the humeral elements of Nasalis and the other odd-nosed monkeys clustered separately in discriminant function analysis from the 3 species of Mesopithecus, which clustered together with the Presbytini. The humeri of duoc-langurs, simakobou, and Nasalis were “morphologically associated with a large globular head, enlarged subscapularis facet, long shaft, extended biepicondylar width, medial condyle directed more medially, and wide and low trochlea and capitulum” (Youlatos et al. 2012:226–227). They 88 mammalian species47(926)—Nasalis larvatus interpreted this as reflecting more derived arboreal locomotion in the odd-nosed clade following divergence from Mesopithecus and the Presbytini. The baculum is about 8 mm long (mean 7.9 mm, n = 3—Dixson 1987). The penis is long and red and the scrotum black, contrasting colors that may function as visual signals in sexual or dominance displays (Chaplin and Jablonski 1998). The mean (n = 5) mass of both testes in breeding condition is 14.7 g, or 0.07% of body mass (Schultz 1938, not seen cited by Kenagy and Trombulak 1986). Function.—Nasalis larvatus has large hands and feet (Figs. 1 and 4) and swims well, a useful capability for its riverine and tidal habitats. Elliot (1913) recounts an observation of 1 individual swimming submerged for 28 min to avoid a hunter in a boat; and Bennett and Sebastian (1988) confirm that N. larvatus can swim underwater for up to 20 m to avoid avian predators. The enlarged nose is used for sexual display and to amplify vocalizations (Bennett and Gombek 1993). In the odd-nosed colobines (including Mesopithecus), several aspects of the scapula, such as the overall proportions and the inclination of the glenoid fossa, resemble those of hylobatids and suggest a high frequency of overhead suspensory locomotion (N. G. Jablonski, in litt.). Youlatos et al. (2012:227) classified duoc-langurs, simakobou, and Nasalis as “Arboreal Walking/Suspensory,” as opposed to snub-nosed monkeys, “Arboreal Walking/Terrestrial.” Its shoulder morphology “seems to accommodate extended arm movements at the shoulder level, favor a partially extended elbow and promote frequent forearm prono-supination” relative to the other colobini studied; these movements “occur frequently in forelimb dominated positional activities, such as arm swing, brachiation or vertical climb that are common in these monkeys” (Youlatos et al. 2012:227). Suspensory feeding in N. larvatus is common (Fig. 5). Napier (1963:187) describes its leap (Fig. 4): “...its hind limbs ... at the moment of take-off are extended at both knee and hip Fig. 4.—Leaping style of Nasalis larvatus. Photograph by Lee Harding. joints. In flight, the forelimbs are extended at the shoulder and reach out towards the landing site to arrest the progress of the leap. At the initial states of the horizontal leap, therefore, both sets of limbs are extended. Subsequently the hind limbs flex to assist the hands at the end of the leap.” Nasalis larvatus walks upright, with the arms raised, when on land and wading (Bennett and Sebastian 1988). Contrary to some often-repeated reports, the hands and feet are not “webbed” per se, but the feet have a slight webbing at the base of the phalanges between toes 2 to 5 that may extend as far as the middle of phalanx 2 (Schultz 1942). The metacarpus and metatarsus are long, both absolutely and relative to the digits (Figs. 1 and 4), and these features no doubt give support when walking on soft mangrove swamp mud, and in swimming. Nasalis larvatus individuals sometimes regurgitate and remasticate food, which allows for a higher food intake efficiency compared to days in which the same individuals do not regurgitate and remasticate (Matsuda et al. 2011a). This and its high chewing efficiency—mean fecal particle size is small for its average mass and significantly smaller than for 2 sympatric colobines, silvered lutung (Trachypithecus cristatus) and red surily (Presbytis rubicunda—Matsuda et al. 2014b)—may be evidence for regular use of rumination. The robust mandibular corpora and symphyses, combined with other aspects of cranial morphology described above, Fig. 5.—Nasalis larvatus juvenile showing single-arm suspensory feeding. Photograph by Lee Harding. 47(926)—Nasalis larvatus mammalian species89 reflect the highly folivorous diet of N. larvatus (Ravosa 1996). Linear enamel hypoplasia, a sensitive dental indicator of physiological stress, occurs at a low frequency in N. larvatus (e.g., 2 of 18, 11%—Guatelli-Steinberg 2000). ONTOGENY AND REPRODUCTION Ontogeny.—Hayssen et al. (1993) give the following ontogenic data for Nasalis larvatus: neonatal mass 454 g, mean number of embryos 1.5 (range 1–2), litter size 1 (occasionally 2), solid food at 6 weeks, and weaned at 7 months, although Zimmermann and Radespiel (2007) give the age at weaning as 246 days (8.2 months). Infants are born with thin, blackish hair and dark blue faces with the short, upturned noses typical of the odd-nosed clade. Murai et al. (2007) classified individuals with at least some dark skin on the face as infants and those that are noticeably smaller than adults, ≤ 1.5 years old, as juveniles. Female N. larvatus normally become sexually mature at age 4 (Zimmermann and Radespiel 2007) to 6 years (Afrilia 2011), after adult dentition is complete (Schultz 1942). Age at 1st breeding is usually 3–5 years for females and 5–7 years for males (Murai 2004). Maximum life span in captivity is 25.1 years (Zimmermann and Radespiel 2007). Maximum age of reproduction is assumed to be equivalent to life span since cessation of estrus is not known (cf. Murai 2004) The tooth eruption pattern of N. larvatus differs markedly from that of other colobines and resembles a cercopithecine pattern in that there is no early eruption of the 2nd molar relative to the incisors in either the upper or lower jaw (Hart 2007): M1 I1 I 2 M 2 PP C M3 M1 I1 I 2 M 2 [ PP C] M3 Schultz (1942) gives detailed measurements of body and limb proportions (including hands and feet) and cranial capacity as N. larvatus grows from fetuses through infants and juveniles to adult males and females. Polydactyly has been reported (1 of 31 births, 3.2%—Schultz 1972). Reproduction.—Reproduction is not seasonal (Hayssen et al. 1993; Boonratana 2011). Based on progesterone and estradiol concentrations in feces, the estrus cycle lasts 22–23 days (Astuti et al. 2011). Sexual swelling is evident in 77.4% of copulating females, with copulating subadult females showing the most distinct swelling (Murai 2006). Gestation is 166 days (Asdell 1964) and lactation lasts 1.5 years (Afrilia 2011). Stark et al. (2012) used an interbirth interval of 2 years for population modeling purposes and calculated a sex ratio at birth of 41.7% males from data given by Boonratana (1993, 2000). From available data for 3 groups in different habitats, the proportions of females breeding were calculated as 45.8% to 64.1% per group and “male monopolization” (= proportion of males that breed) as 74% to 100% (Stark 2012). The ratio of young infants to adult females can range from 0 to 0.65 (Boonratana 2011). ECOLOGY Population characteristics.—Sha et al. (2008) estimated a minimum of < 6,000 Nasalis larvatus individuals in 5 highly fragmented populations in Sabah and smaller groups elsewhere. Almost all were in coastal marshes and estuaries, although some were far inland on major rivers. Population estimates are < 300 in 1 population in Brunei (Bennett 1986) and about 1,000 in Sarawak (Yeager and Blondal 1992). The population in Central, West, and East Kalimantan was estimated at 9,200 in 2005 (Manansang et al. 2005). The total population may therefore be as high as about 16,000, although current, quantitative estimates are not available. Space use.—Nasalis larvatus occurs mainly along rivers, coastal deltas, and islands, rarely more than 200 km inland from the coast, usually at elevations < 200 m (Meijaard and Nijman 2000a) to a maximum of about 350 m (Medway 1977). Its habitat is mainly riparian or riverine dipterocarp forest and coastal or inland mangrove forest. Dipterocarp forest has taller trees than mangrove forests and provides better predator-avoidance cover, especially the taller trees used for sleeping (Matsuda et al. 2009b; Bismark 2010). It is often at highest densities at ecotones and being able to exploit 2 or more forest types may give it a greater variety of food and cover throughout the year (Bennett and Sebastian 1988). Typical habitat of N. larvatus in Sarawak is mangrove-nipa forest along the saline-brackish portions of rivers, with Avicennia and Sonneratia close to the river mouth giving way upstream to Rhizophora and, further upriver, to Brugiera and Nypa fruticans; further up, where the water is fresh, the riparian forest is often taller than the surrounding lowland dipterocarp forest (Bennett and Sebastian 1988). Vegetation types that dominate its habitat at Nipah Panjang, West Kalimantan, include Rhizophora apiculata, R. mucronata, Bruguiera gymnorrhiza, and B. parviflora (Kartono et al. 2008). In western Sabah (Bernard 2009), N. larvatus habitat is dominated (top 6 species by frequency in decreasing order) by: Excoecaria indica (Euphorbiaceae), Cerbera odollam (Apocynaceae), Ficus binnendykii (Moracreae), B. gymnorrhiza (Rhizophoraceae), Psydrax (Rubiaceae), and Symplocos celastrifolia (Symplocacecae). In eastern Sabah, along the Kinabatangan River, the predominant tree species in N. larvatus habitats are Mallotus muticus, E. indica, Dillenia excelsa, Croton oblongus, Nauclea subdita, Xylosma sumatrana, Pternandra galeata, Vitex pinnata, Vatica rassak, and Antidesma thwaitesianum; predominant vines are Lophopyxis maingayi, Croton caudatus, Dalbergia parvifolia, Hydnocarpus sumatrana, Entada rheedei, Bridelia stipularis, Albizia corniculata, Artabotrys suaveolens, Bauhinia diptera, and Millettia nieuwenhuisii (Matsuda 2008). N. larvatus can adapt to human presence and will use rubber plantations adjacent to riverine and lowland forest that provides food and cover but avoids areas of intense human activity (Soendjoto 2005). Nasalis larvatus is nonterritorial (Yeager 1989; Boonratana 2000; Matsuda et al. 2009b), home range sizes vary from a mean of 130 ha (range 25–138 ha—Yeager 1989), to 221 ha in riverine forest and 315 ha in coastal mangrove forest, with up to 100% overlap among groups (Boonratana 2000), to 900 ha in mixed 90 mammalian species47(926)—Nasalis larvatus mangrove and lowland forests (Bennett and Sebastian 1988). In good habitat with little disturbance, however, home ranges can be much smaller. For example, at Kutai National Park, East Kalimantan, home ranges of 3 groups was 18, 19, and 21 ha with 20–62% overlap (Bismark and Iskander 2002). Food availability is the main determinant of home range size in N. larvatus (reviewed by Matsuda et al. 2009b). Daily activity is allocated 1st to resting, 2nd to feeding, and 3rd to traveling; for example, Matsuda et al. (2009a) found a daily budget of 76.5% resting, 19.5% feeding, and 3.5% moving. In both genders, feeding activity peaks in the late afternoon at 1500–1700 h, shortly before sleeping, with differences among the seasons reflecting fruit availability (Yasaningthias 2010; Matsuda et al. 2014a). After foraging during the day, N. larvatus groups habitually return to well-developed, riverside tree patches for sleeping. For example, groups sleep mainly in patches of tall Sonneratia alba (Lythraceae) and Bruguiera (Rhizophoraceaa) in the bends in the Kinabatangan River, rather than along the smaller tributaries where they range during the day (Boonratana 2000; Matsuda et al. 2009b). Areas near the sleeping sites and river crossing sites also tend to be foraging sites when fruit is abundant, but in times of low fruit abundances they forage farther away from sleeping sites (Matsuda et al. 2009b). Along the Mananggul River in Sabah, N. larvatus spends significantly more time away from the river (> 50 m) than near the river (< 50 m) in all months except during June–August, when the foraging time allocation is reversed; the higher use of riverine habitats is associated with greater availability of fruits and flowers and lower availability of young leaves in these months (Matsuda et al. 2011b). Daily movement ranges from about 500 m (Bismark 2010) to an average of 910 m (range 370–1,810, n = 53 full-day follows—Boonratana 2000). In a study near Nipah Panjang Village, Kalimantan, linear distances between main activity sites averaged 158 m ± 75 SD and daily range of groups averaged 904 m/ day ± 117 SD, or a maximum radius of 371 m ± 47 SD (Kartono et al. 2008). Sleeping site positions are shifted daily (e.g., 192 m ± 65 SD on subsequent nights—Kartono et al. 2008). Availability of fruit, but not of flowers or young leaves, is the main determinant of daily path length: N. larvatus groups travel farther to search for fruit when it is less abundant (Matsuda et al. 2009b). A minor determinant is rain, during which they travel a little less (Matsuda et al. 2009b). In a riverine forest with a maximum canopy height of 30 m, N. larvatus climbed up to 21 m high, although most feeding, resting, and traveling were between 10 and 17 m high (Boonratana 2000). These groups occasionally swam across the Kinabatangan River, which might be about 150 m wide at crossing places but much wider elsewhere, and almost daily across 20–25 m wide tributaries. Choice of sleeping trees depends on tree size (diameter, height, and number of branches) and proximity to the river, and not on the tree species; sleeping trees are near other trees with overlapping branches, creating good arboreal connectivity for escape (Bernard et al. 2012). However, at Sungai Tolak, West Kalimantan, N. larvatus preferred to sleep in large, emergent trees with few canopy connections located along rivers, consistent with the authors’ hypotheses that such sites would decrease molestation by mosquitoes and reduce potential entry routes for terrestrial predators (Feilen and Marshall 2014). The selection of sleeping sites in tall trees on the river bank in the angle of bends in the river and where the river is narrow is also thought to be a predator-avoidance strategy: when danger approaches from land, N. larvatus can leap into the river and swim across (Yeager 1991a; Boonratana 1993; Bismark 1994; Matsuda et al. 2008a; Matsuda et al. 2011b). When the forest is flooded, however, the predation risk is less and they are more likely to select interiorforest sleeping sites (Matsuda et al. 2010a). Since home range size and daily movement distances are influenced by food (especially fruit) availability, it follows that biomass of N. larvatus is influenced by vegetation types. Biomass of N. larvatus ranges from 45 to 500 kg/km2 (Bennett and Sebastian 1988; Yeager 1989; Boonratana 2000). Density ranges from about 8 to 60 individuals/km2 (summarized by Bismark 2010). For example, Yeager and Blondal (1992) reported 9 individuals/km2 in the most severely degraded habitat, 25/km2 in habitat with severe destruction, 33/km2 with moderate degradation, and 62/km2 with low degradation. In the Garama River area of the Klias Peninsula, Sabah, population density was 1.85 groups/km2 or 14.07 individuals/km2; the population there, 10 groups with 76 individuals, was unchanged since a previous survey in 2005 and included some groups outside of the protected area (Ridzwan Ali et al. 2009). In Brunei Bay, the population density in 1995 was 4.78 individuals/km2 (Yeager 1995). Diet.—Nasalis larvatus is a folivore–frugivore specializing in seeds, fruits, and young leaves (Yeager 1989; Matsuda et al. 2009a, 2009b). Although it consumes a high diversity of plant species (e.g., 188 species—Matsuda et al. 2009a), it is an extremely selective feeder in terms of plant parts: mature leaves comprise only about 3% of the diet (Bennett and Sebastian 1988). The degree of folivory varies widely. For example, it has a mainly folivorous diet at Kutai National Park, East Kalimantan, of 81.1% leaves, 8.38% fruit, 7.68% flowers, 2.8% other including bark, insects, and crabs (Bismark et al. 1994). Similarly, at Tanjung Puting National Park, Central Kalimantan, N. larvatus diet is comprised of 79% leaves, 18% fruit, and 3% flowers (Purba 2009). On the Kinabatangan River, young leaves (65.9%) and fruits (25.9%) account for the majority of feeding time, with most (> 90%) fruit eaten being flesh and seeds of unripe fruits (Matsuda et al. 2009a). The diet there includes 7.7% flowers, 0.03% mature leaves, and 0.5% other (Matsuda 2008). By contrast, in Samunsam, Sarawak, N. larvatus eats only 47% leaves, with 3% flowers, 35% fruit, and 15% seeds (Bennett 1986). On the Kinabatangan River, of the 48 dominant plant species, 16 had fruits and flowers that N. larvatus did not eat at all, in some cases because the seeds were too hard or the fruits too big, although orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus) and long-tailed macaques ate fruits of at least 5 of those species (Matsuda 2008). Predominant species of Croton were avoided completely despite their abundant fruits and flowers, which produced a strong smell (to observers), suggesting toxic or repellent chemicals (Matsuda 2008). 47(926)—Nasalis larvatus mammalian species91 By comparing availability of various foods over an entire year, Matsuda (2008) showed that, although leaves were a constant dietary component, fruits varied seasonally, becoming more important in seasons of high availability of preferred fruits; hence, despite its being commonly described as primarily a folivore, this is an oversimplification. N. larvatus eats the calyx and flesh as well as seeds when the seeds are unripe, but often discards the calyx and flesh when the seeds are ripe, although this varies according to the phenology of ripening fruits (Matsuda 2008). N. larvatus also consumes bark of certain trees and nests of a species of arboreal termite, both of which vary seasonally for females but not males; termites evidently supplement mineral nutrients, absorb toxins, and assist digestion, rather than serving as a protein source (Matsuda 2008). Nasalis larvatus adapts to a variety of diets, according to what is available and seasonal changes in plant nutrients and digestibility. In the Klias Peninsula, Sabah, N. larvatus eats at least 17 plant species, with preference for Ficus binnendijkii, B. gymnorrhiza, Hibiscus tiliaceus, and E. indica (Bernard 2009). At Labuk Bay, Sabah—a limited mangrove habitat surrounded by oil palm plantations—its food is mainly young leaves of R. apiculata (fruits, shoots, and mature as well as young leaves), Bruguiera parviflora, Acrostichum aureum (only the spores of this fern are eaten), S. alba, Ficus benjamina, Ipomoea pescaprae, Tetrastigma glabratum, and Sphenodesme stellata (Agoramoorthy and Hsu 2005a). In Tanjung Puting National Park, N. larvatus uses at least 55 plant species and prefers Eugenia, Ganua motleyana, and Lophpetalum javanicum; although these are the most frequent and most dominant tree species there, differences between availability and the species eaten indicated that N. larvatus selects particular plant species (Yeager 1989). At the same national park, swamp forest habitats provide twice the diversity of food plants as lowland forest (Purba 2009). Bismark and Iskander (2002) list 20 plant species that N. larvatus consumes (always the leaves, plus the flowers or fruits of 4 species), out of 55 available. At Pulau Kaget, South Kalimantan, until it was extirpated, N. larvatus ate leaves, fruits, or flowers of Limnocharis flava, Agapanthus africanus, Hymenachne amplicaulis, and Vittis trifolia (Bismark 1997, not seen cited by Bismark 2010). In Samboja Kuala, East Kalimantan, N. larvatus eats Mangifera caesia, Garcinia mangostana, Durio zibethinus, Sondaricum koetjapi, Hevea brasiliensis, and Sonneratia caseolaris (Alikodra et al. 1995 cited by Bismark 2010). Leaves from species consumed are higher in protein, phosphorus, and potassium and lower in fiber, calcium, and manganese than those available but not consumed, similar to other colobine diets that are typically high in protein and low in protein inhibitors (Yeager et al. 1997). Within the category of high protein-low fiber young leaves, abundance is also a factor in selection, suggesting that N. larvatus optimizes both leaf quality and intake per unit time (Matsuda et al. 2013b). Although N. larvatus inhabits riverine forests with higher-quality leaves than other available forest types, including primary lowland forest, its habitat may still be protein-limited because of the requirements of its large body size; on the other hand, the high quality of foods available in these habitats may be a factor in the larger body size of N. larvatus relative to other colobines (Matsuda et al. 2013b). Agoramoorthy and Hsu (2005b) gave the ash, crude fibre, protein, and mineral content of these foods and noted the high sodium content in their study area—a small patch of mangrove forest adjacent to the ocean and surrounded by a sea of oil palm plantations—compared to other dietary studies, a consequence of limited vegetation heterogeneity. Bismark (2010) calculated that an 8.84 kg N. larvatus would consume 900 g fresh weight (270 g dry weight) of food per day, equivalent to 1,066 kcal or 120.68 kcal/kg of body weight. The leaves, fruits, flowers, and seeds eaten by wild N. larvatus are lower in protein and higher in lignin, relative to 9 other colobine species, suggesting a poor quality diet (Nijboer et al. 2006). However, some riparian plant species’ leaves and aerial roots have higher mineral content than the same plants grown in soil, suggesting a nutritional advantage of their habitat (Bismark 2010). Certain foods are consumed in small amounts but contribute a disproportionate amount of nutrients because they are high in potassium, zinc, calcium, or copper; these include Alophyllus cobbe, the flowers of R. apiculata and Avicennia officinalis, and the bark of R. apiculata (Bismark et al. 1994). As a seed disperser N. larvatus helps forest regeneration: intact small seeds of Ficus and other tree and vine species are commonly found in fecal samples (Matsuda et al. 2013a). Interspecific interactions.—Ascaris and Trichiuris egg worms are common in Nasalis larvatus feces (Bismark 1994; Bismark 2010). Hasegawa et al. (2003) describe a new species of nematode, Enterobius (Colobenterobius) serratus, from N. larvatus. Predators of N. larvatus include Neofelis diardi, clouded leopard (Davis 1962; Matsuda et al. 2008b; Nowell and Jackson 2010), Tomistoma schlegeli, false gavial (Galdikas 1985; Yeager 1991a), Ophiophagus hannah, king cobra, and Varanus salvator, monitor lizard (Bismark 2010). Populations of monitors increase following forest clearing and this is thought to affect N. larvatus populations; N. larvatus is also hunted for bait to catch the lizards (Bismark 2010). After documenting predation on the banded surili (Presbytis femoralis) by the changeable hawk-eagle (Nisaetus [formerly Spizaetus] cirrhatus) and using data on the relative size of sympatric Nisaetus hawk-eagles and colobines, Fam and Nijman (2011) predicted that N. larvatus would be little threatened by Niseatus hawk-eagles, 3 species of which occur on Borneo. However, larger eagles occur on Borneo, such as the black eagle, Ictinaetus malayensis, which is known to take mammals (Myers 2009). Crested serpent eagle (Spilornis cheela), a large raptor that I saw frequently in N. larvatus habitat on the Kinabatangan River in 2011, primarily preys on reptiles (Myers 2009). As with other larger primates of Southeast Asia (cf. Hart 2007), N. larvatus seemingly has little to fear from avian predators. 92 mammalian species47(926)—Nasalis larvatus Nasalis larvatus is commonly sympatric with silvered lutungs and long-tailed macaques and often encounters other primates such as surilis, Bornean orangutans (P. pygmaeus; henceforth, orangutans), and gibbons (Hylobates). Agoramoorthy and Hsu (2005a) described wild male and female orangutan nesting near and interacting with groups of N. larvatus, but without obvious conflict or competition for food. In 2011, I observed N. larvatus feeding in the same trees as Bornean gibbons, Hylobates muelleri, and silvered lutungs, but separated temporally by a few hours, along the Kinabatangan River; and I have seen N. larvatus groups aggregating for sleeping within sight of silvered lutungs nighttime aggregations along the Kinabatangan and Klias Rivers. In the Mananggul River, tributary to the Kinabatangan River, Matsuda et al. (2011b) observed long-tailed macaques about as frequently as N. larvatus in riverine habitats (< 50 m from water), but infrequently at inland sites (> 50 m from water); and they observed pig-tailed macaques, M. nemestrina, Bornean gibbons, and silvered lutungs much less often overall, but still far more frequently in riverine habitats than inland sites. They observed orangutans about as frequently as N. larvatus overall, but more frequently at inland sites than riverine. HUSBANDRY Nijboer et al. (2006) provide data on chemical composition including minerals of native plant foods eaten by Nasalis larvatus and note that their natural foods are low in protein and contain much higher levels of indigestible fiber than most zoo diets. In captive N. larvatus with a total average feed intake of 12% of body mass, dry matter and plant cell wall material disappearance exceeded 80%; passage marker studies revealed a transit time of 14 h, mean passage time of 49 h, and 5–80% retention after 52 h (Dierenfeld et al. 1992). In that study, digestion coefficients and retention times were greater than expected based on body size. In captivity, the problem of surplus males arises because avoidance and dispersal are not possible (Mulder 2012). A solution is to establish all-male groups in zoo environments which Sha et al. (2012) showed, can be accomplished with development of affiliative behaviors, a dominance hierarchy, and little contact aggression after the first few weeks. BEHAVIOR Grouping behavior.—Nasalis larvatus is typically found in 1 male-multifemale groups, but with overlapping home ranges, as well as all-male and predominantly male nonbreeding groups (Bennett and Sebastian 1988; Yeager 1991b, 1992, 1995; Boonratana 2002). Male dispersal is routine (solitary males and all-male groups are often seen) and females commonly transfer among groups (Bennett and Sebastian 1988; Murai et al. 2007). Transferring females are usually subadults (Murai et al. 2007). Over the course of a year or more, group stability is low, with large fluctuations in both male and female members (Rajanathan and Bennett 1990). Aside from dispersing individuals, however, groups are relatively stable (Yeager 1990b). For example, in 16 months of observation, Bennett and Sebastian (1988) never saw a harem split into smaller parties, even when members were scattered over > 100 m. Some groups associate more than others and select sleeping sites close together: a multilevel social organization of a band comprising several groups (Yeager 1991b; Boonratana 2002; Grüter et al. 2012). However, Matsuda et al. (2010b), using a Bayesian analysis of N. larvatus density in relation to environmental factors, suggest that the previously reported multilevel hierarchy might instead result from temporary aggregations of groups around clumped food resources. Group size varies by habitat quality, size, and degree of disturbance, ranging from 3 to 32 (Kawabe and Mano 1972; Yeager 1989; Kartono et al. 2008). In Tanjung Puting National Park, Kalimantan, which has a mixture of mangrove, riverine, and lowland dipterocarp forest, Yeager (1989) reports a mean group size of 12.1 for all groups (n = 145 individuals). Group sizes in Kutai National Park are 12.0–17.4 in riverine forest along the Sangata River and 21.0 in a mangrove forest (Bismark and Iskander 2002). In a mixed riverine–mangrove forest of Batu Ampar District, West Kalimantan, mean group size varies by the amount of riverine habitat available, e.g., 19 individuals ± SD 2 in narrow strips of riverine habitat and 16 individuals ± SD 2 in broader strips with double the amount of riverine habitat available (Kartono et al. 2008). The proportional amount of resting, feeding, and moving varies with forest type, with feeding activity peaking at 1300 to 1500 h (Salter et al. 1985). For example, in mixed riverine– mangrove forest of the Sangata River, daily activity budgets are allocated to resting 42.3% of observation time (5.50 h), moving 25.2%, feeding 23.2%, grooming 1.1%, and playing 8.2% (Bismark et al. 1994). In riverine forests along the Kinabatangan River, N. larvatus rests more, feeds less, and moves much less: 76.5% resting, 19.5% feeding, and 3.5% moving (Matsuda et al. 2009a). Nasalis larvatus has a polygynous mating system with a single or alpha male, several adult females, and young of various ages. N. larvatus societies are female-centered, males remaining aloof from most social interactions (Matsuda et al. 2012a). Allomothering behaviors include handling and grooming of infants by adult females other than the mother, who easily retrieves her infant (Gorzitze 1996; Matsuda et al. 2012a); however, allonursing has not been observed (Kohda 1985). Copulation is infrequent (e.g., 0.01% of 4,966 scan observations—Boonratana 2011). Females and, less often, males solicit copulation, which involved 1 mount of mean duration 25 and 27 s in 2 studies (Murai 2006; Boonratana 2011), although up to 6 mounts have been observed; however, males do not always accede to female solicitations (Yeager 1990a; Murai 2006; Boonratana 2011). Females solicit copulation by using a pouting 47(926)—Nasalis larvatus mammalian species93 facial expression (pursing or pouching the lips) to get the male’s attention, followed by head-shaking and presenting the hindquarters; she also shakes her head during copulation (Hollihn 1973; Yeager 1990a). Males use a similar pouting expression when soliciting and both may use this expression after copulation (Hollihn 1973). Females solicit and mate during interestrus and pregnancy, as well as during estrus (Hollihn 1973). Non-copulatory mounting also occurs between females, between females and infants or juveniles, among juveniles, and between juveniles and infants; those between adult females may occur shortly after failed solicitations toward males (Yeager 1990a; Murai 2006; Boonratana 2011). Females compete for mating and may harass a mating pair (Yeager 1990a). Infants and juveniles may also harass copulating pairs (Boonratana 2011). In captivity, neonates immediately become the center of attention, with others of the group huddling around the new mother and observing the infant (Hollihn 1973). Hollihn (1973) also notes that, in captivity, females other than the mother carry new infants and a male held 1 momentarily; the mothers retrieve their infants without difficulty. After 2 wild births, both females resumed copulating with the alpha male soon after; in one of the births that occurred in the daytime, other group members watched the parturition but were not otherwise involved (Gorzitze 1996). Both females consumed the placentas. Nasalis larvatus individuals are less intensely social than other colobines, displaying relatively fewer intraunit interactions (Matsuda et al. 2012b). For example, in 1 study N. larvatus devoted < 0.5% of total observation time to grooming, while other direct affiliative interactions were not observed at all (Matsuda et al. 2012a). It exhibits a low level of aggression, which is rarely seen in intergroup interactions (Bennett and Sebastian 1988; Yeager 1991b). Boonratana (1993) saw agonistic behavior involved in only 0.7% (n = 5) and 0.8% (n = 34) of total activity time in 2 groups, none of which interactions entailed physical contact; instances included an alpha male chasing away a female from another group and an alpha male chasing away a male from another group. Similarly, in 1,968 h of focal observations on the adult male and 1,539 h on the 6 females, Matsuda et al. (2012a) recorded just 39 agonistic interactions: 26 were displacements from sleeping places, 6 were the alpha male threatening others to mediate quarrels among females and juveniles, and 7 were displacements from feeding sites. The alpha male’s main role, besides protection from predators, is to maintain group cohesion by policing agonistic behaviors of others (Matsuda et al. 2012a). The low level of aggression is common to the Rhinopithecini (Yeager 1990b; Matsuda et al. 2012b; Mulder 2012). There is no clear, linear dominance hierarchy, although specific individuals are more dominated than others (Matsuda et al. 2012a). Most grooming is by females grooming females or juveniles; males rarely or never groom females but females occasionally groom them (Yeager 1990b; Matsuda et al. 2012a). Although infanticide is rarely observed or suspected in N. larvatus, 1 case has been reported after an adult male took over a group (Agoramoorthy and Hsu 2005b); however, this occurred in disturbed habitat in a semi-wild population that is provisioned by a tourism operator in Labuk Bay Sanctuary, Sabah (Agoramoorthy and Hsu 2005a) and may not represent natural behavior. Murai et al. (2007:121), commenting on this, noted that “...we never observed infanticide in our study site, whereas male replacements were observed three times.” Communication.—The most frequently heard vocalizations are resonant, drawn-out goose-like calls, the female a little softer than the male’s. Based on multiparametric analysis, Röper et al. (2014) identified acoustic features of the 4 most common call types: “shrieks,” “honks,” “roars,” and “brays.” Of these, 3 are “loud calls” that could be used for noninvasive, vocalization-based monitoring (Röper et al. 2014). They also described “choruses” in which multiple callers produced mixed vocalizations. During acts of aggression or when alarmed, they make a very high frequency tonal call, or shriek, the maximum pitch of which, 1.4–6.8 kHz, is higher than expected based on a comparative study of large primates (Srivathsan and Meier 2011). The high frequency may be an adaptation for predator avoidance (crocodiles) and intragroup contact in dense vegetation (Srivathsan and Meier 2011). Miscellaneous behavior.—Groups swim rivers to avoid investigators more frequently when naïve than after they become accommodated, further evidence that swimming can be a strategy to avoid terrestrial predators (Boonratana 2000). To cross rivers, Nasalis larvatus selects crossings with narrow bank-to-bank or branch-to-bank distances (Yeager 1991a; Matsuda et al. 2008a). Groups leap from heights of 5–15 m, land “with a great splash” and after surfacing, swim directly to the far shore (Boonratana 2000:11). The selection of riverside sleeping places also appears to be mainly a predator-avoidance strategy because neither temperature nor food availability differs between riverside and inland sites where N. larvatus feeds during the day (Matsuda et al. 2011b). Adult males may confront intruders while the others depart, except for humans to which they are habituated (Kern 1964). I observed (Kinabatangan River, May 2011) that, when a female and infant were surprised at close range, the infant instantly dropped to the ground followed quickly by the female and both escaped to another tree under cover of the understory. GENETICS Cytogenetics.—Unlike other colobines (e.g., African colobines, surilis, lutungs, langurs, duoc-langurs, and snub-nosed monkeys) in which the diploid chromosome number (2n) = 44, the diploid number in Nasalis larvatus is 48 (Chiarelli 1966; Chen et al. 1979). Chiarelli (1966) defined 4 groups of chromosomes with similar dimension and morphology: (a) 7 pairs of metacentric chromosomes, of which pairs 6 and 7 are of the same size and distinctly smaller than pair 5; (b) 9 pairs all submetacentric; (c) 7 pairs of small chromosomes, all submetacentric; and (d) 1 pair marked by a large achromatic region on 94 mammalian species47(926)—Nasalis larvatus one of the arms. The karyotype of N. larvatus is derived (not basal as previously thought), nested within Asian colobines and shares a common period of descent with other odd-nosed colobines after the divergence of duoc-langurs (Bigoni et al. 2003). A pericentric inversion links Nasalis (and presumably the other Rhinopithecini) with the lutungs (Stanyon et al. 2008). Molecular genetics.—Nasalis occupies a monophyletic clade of odd-nosed monkeys, or Rhinopithecini, that also includes simakobu, duoc-langurs, and snub-nosed monkeys (Sterner et al. 2006; Whittaker et al. 2006). Based on noncoding nuclear genes and the mitochondrial genome (mtDNA), Nasalis and snub-nosed monkeys form a sister clade to duoclangurs and the odd-nosed group as a whole forms a sister taxon with surilis (Zhang and Ryder 1998; Liedigk et al. 2012; Wang et al. 2012). The odd-nosed clade including the ancestors of Nasalis diverged from the Presbytini (langurs, lutungs, and surilis—Groves 2001) about 7–10 million years ago (Sterner et al. 2006; Md. Zain et al. 2010; Meyer et al. 2011; Roos et al. 2011). Age of divergence estimates based on mtDNA suggest that the lineages leading to snub-nosed monkeys, duoc-langurs, and Nasalis+simakobu originated in the late Miocene, about 7.3 million years ago, Nasalis+simakobu split from duoc-langurs 6.3 million years ago, and Nasalis and simakobu diverged in the early Pleistocene, 2.5 to 1.75 million years ago (Liedigk et al. 2012; Wang et al. 2012). Population genetics.—Salgado-Lynn et al. (2010) found little genetic structure in microsatellite markers among 33 samples from around Sabah: a mean of 6.25 alleles per locus and a mean expected heterozygosity of 0.674; all but 1 locus were in Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium, and there is no evidence for linkage disequilibrium between loci. There is also no identifiable population structure within populations, based on mtDNA control region analysis of Klias River subpopulations (MunshiSouth and Bernard 2011). However, the haplotypes of the mitochondrial control region in 5 captive N. larvatus in Japan were well differentiated from the haplotypes previously reported in wild populations from northern Borneo, indicating a greater amount of genetic diversity in proboscis monkeys than previously reported (Ogata 2014). CONSERVATION Nasalis larvatus is listed as “Endangered” by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (Meijaard et al. 2008) and is on Appendix I of CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora 2012). By 1986, 40% of N. larvatus habitat had been lost (International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources data cited by McNeely et al. 1990). This figure reached 49% lost by 1995, continuing at a rate of 2% lost per year (Bismark 2010). In 1997–1998, forest fires, the result of a disastrous project to convert peat-swamp forest to rice cultivation in Kalimantan, burned about 400,000 ha of forest (Tisdell and Nantha 2007) and destroyed the greatest proportion of remaining N. larvatus habitat of any primate in Kalimantan (Meijaard et al. 2008). Logging and conversion of forest to oil palm plantations are the major threats and both continue to accelerate in many areas. Along the Kinabatangan River, the effect of habitat loss is exacerbated by tourism, which disturbs N. larvatus in the few stands of tall riverine trees that are left (Boonratana 2013). Population viability analysis predicts that, in the absence of further management efforts, a population in a protected area in Sabah will remain fairly stable, while 2 populations in protected areas in Kalimantan will decrease by more than half, the smaller going effectively extinct in 30 years (Stark et al. 2012). In that study, fire associated with land clearing for agriculture has the greatest impact and hunting the next greatest impact. At least 1 population (in Pulau Kaget Nature Reserve) has recently become extirpated and others are likely to follow at current rates of habitat loss and hunting (Meijaard and Nijman 2000b). Indeed, maps of its current distribution (e.g., Meijaard and Nijman 2000b; Sha et al. 2008) show large stretches of coastline and major rivers with seemingly suitable habitat but no recent observations. Sha et al. (2008:113) found that only 15.3% of the population in Sabah occurred within protected forest reserves and urged “greater efforts ... to restoring remnant habitat patches as well as re-establishing corridors along fragmented river systems, ... linking major populations through a protected area network.” In Kalimantan, unfortunately, there is no difference in deforestation rates between non-protected and protected areas, which consequently provide little security for N. larvatus (Curran et al. 2004). By modeling mangrove habitat use in Kutai National Park, Suwarto (2015) showed that N. larvatus selected areas of dense vegation, presence of particular food tree species and proximity to water, while avoiding roads and settlements, limiting them to only 18.8% of the park, of which just 1.35% was high suitability habitat. Nasalis larvatus can adapt to certain developments, such as rubber plantations, as long as heterogeneity of vegetation types and access to water are maintained (Soendjoto 2005). Another example is the private 162 ha Labuk Bay Sanctuary, where a population last counted at 89 persists within an oil palm plantation where only high-saline mangrove plants are available (Agoramoorthy and Hsu 2005a). N. larvatus damages crops by feeding on young leaves and flowers of rubber trees and the young leaves of coconut (Soendjoto et al. 2003). It can utilize logged forest as long as it has suitable tree cover, security, and food, but illegal gold mining in the headwaters is a threat in some areas (e.g., Kendilo River, East Kalimantan—Rachmawan 2006). Hunting is significant in some areas, mainly by inland Dyak and Iban ethnic groups, because monkey meat is prohibited to Muslims, who are mostly ethnic Malays and predominate along the coast (Meijaard and Nijman 2000a). Manansang et al. (2005:3) noted that, “Although ...the proboscis monkey in the wild probably numbers > 10,000 individuals, the species still has an unacceptable risk of extinction... because of unsustainable (and largely illegal) rates of deforestation that devastate proboscis monkey habitat, because existing 47(926)—Nasalis larvatus mammalian species95 populations are almost entirely too small to be viable in the long term and are highly isolated from each other, and because forest fires are becoming more frequent and severe—due mostly to anthropogenic factors.” Despite recent conservation initiatives, to prevent N. larvatus from declining further will require greater efforts to close the gap between policy and implementation, establish more (and more effective) community-based reserves, increase community awareness, reinforce traditional laws protecting monkeys, reconnect isolated habitat through reforestation, and improve law enforcement (Tisdell and Nantha 2007; Kartono et al. 2008; Nijman and Meijaard 2008; Sha et al. 2008; Soendjoto et al. 2008; Purba 2009; Ridzwan Ali et al. 2009; Bismark 2010; Hon 2011; Stark et al. 2012). Ex situ conservation may also play a role if captive breeding can obviate the need for N. larvatus to be captured in the wild for zoos and to augment or restore wild populations (Manansang et al. 2005). ACKNOWLEDGMENTS T. Harrison, Ir. A. P. Kartono, J. Krigbaum, I. Matsuda, J. Munshi-South, V. Nijman, K. Röper, and E. Sargis provided research material. P. Gomez and staff of the Bibliothèque nationale de France and A. Lemaire and staff of the Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, Paris, facilitated access to many of the rare books cited herein. C. Groves reviewed an earlier version of the synonymies. P. Myers photographed the skull. LITERATURE CITED Afrilia, G. N. 2011. Studi reproduksi bekantan (Nasalis larvatus) di habitat ex-situ (abstract). Thesis, Institut Pertanian Bogor, Bogor, Indonesia. Agoramoorthy, G., and M. J. Hsu. 2005a. Borneo’s proboscis monkey – a study of its diet of mineral and phytochemical concentrations. Current Science 89:454–457. Agoramoorthy, G., and M. J. Hsu. 2005b. Occurrence of infanticide among wild proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus) in Sabah, Northern Borneo. Folia Primatologica 76:177–179. Alikodra, H. S., A. H. Mustari, N. Santosa, and S. Yasuma. 1995. Social interaction of proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus Wurmb) group at Samboja Koala, East Kalimantan. Annual Report of Pusrehut 6:1–11 (not seen, cited in Bismark 2010). Allen, J. A. 1895. On the names of mammals given by Kerr in his ‘Animal Kingdom,’ published in 1792. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History VII:179–192. Anderson, J. 1878. Anatomical and zoological researches, comprising an account of the zoological results of the two expeditions to western Yunnan in 1868 and 1875, and a monograph of the two cetacean genera, Platanista and Orcella. B. Quaritch, London, United Kingdom. Ankel-Simons, F. 2000. Primate anatomy: an introduction. 2nd ed. Academic Press, San Diego, California. Asdell, S. A. 1964. Patterns of mammalian reproduction: a compendium of species-specific data. 2nd ed. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, New York. Astuti, P., C. M. Airin, H. Maheshwari, and L. Sjahfirdi. 2011. Detection ovarian cycle of bekantan (Nasalis larvatus) based on the profile of fecal estradiol and progesterone. International Journal of Basic and Applied Sciences 11:1–8. Audebert, J. B. 1800. Histoire naturelle des singes et des makis. Paris Chez Desray An Huitieme, Paris, France. Bennett, E. L. 1986. Proboscis monkeys in Sarawak: their ecology, status, conservation and management. WWF Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, and New York Zoological Society, New York. Bennett, E. L., and F. Gombek. 1993. Proboscis monkeys of Borneo. Natural History Publications, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia. Bennett, E. L., and A. C. Sebastian. 1988. Social organization and ecology of proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus) in mixed coastal forest in Sarawak. International Journal of Primatology 9:233–255. Bernard, H. 2009. Conservation of the proboscis monkey, Nasalis larvatus, in the Klias Peninsula, Sabah, Malaysia. Annual Report of Pro Natura Fund Vol. 18. Institute for Tropical Biology and Conservation, Universiti Malaysia Sabah, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia. Bernard, H., I. Matsuda, G. Hanya, and A. H. Ahmad. 2012. Characteristics of night sleeping trees of proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus) in Sabah, Malaysia. International Journal of Primatology 32:259–267. Bigoni, F., R. Stanyon, R. Wimmer, and W. Schempp. 2003. Chromosome painting shows that the proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus) has a derived karyotype and is phylogenetically nested within Asian colobines. American Journal of Primatology 60:85–93. Bismark, M. 1994. Ekologi makan dan perilaku bekantan (Nasalis larvatus Wurmb) de hutan bakau taman nasional kutai, Kalimantan Timur. Ph.D. dissertation, Institut Pertanian Bogor, Bogor, Indonesia. Bismark, M. 1997. Pengelolaan habitat dan populasi bekantan (Nasalis larvatus) di Cagar Alam Pulau Kaget, Kalimantan Selatan. Prosiding diskusi hasil-hasil penelitian penerapan hasil litbang konservasi sumberdaya alam untuk mendukung pengelolaan sumberdaya alam hayati dan ekosistemnya, Bogor, Indonesia (not seen, cited by Bismark 2010). Bismark, M. 2010. Proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus) bio-ecology and conservation. Pp. 217–233 in Indonesian primates, developments in primatology: progress and prospects. Vol. 2 (S. Gursky-Doyen and J. Supriatna, eds.). Springer, New York. Bismark, M., and S. Iskander. 2002. Kajian total populasi dan struktur sosial bekantan (Nasalis larvatus) di Taman Nasional Kutai, Kalimantan Timur. Buletin Penelitian Hutan 631:17–29. Bismark, M., I. Soerianegara, D. Sastrapradja, F. G. Suratmo, H. S. Alikodra, and H. Pawitan. 1994. The potency of mangrove forest habitat of the proboscis monkey’s food sources at the Kutai National Park, East Kalimantan. International Primatological Society Congress, Bali, Indonesia. Boonratana, R. 1993. The ecology and behaviour of the proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus) in the Lower Kinabatangan, Sabah. Ph.D. dissertation, Mahidol University, Mahidol, Thailand. Boonratana, R. 2000. Ranging behavior of proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus) in the Lower Kinabatangan, Northern Borneo. International Journal of Primatology 21:497–518. Boonratana, R. 2002. Social organisation of proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus) in the Lower Kinabatangan, Sabah, Malaysia. Malayan Nature Journal 56:57–75. Boonratana, R. 2011. Observations on the sexual behavior and birth seasonality of proposcis monkey (Nasalis larvatus) along the lower Kinabatangan River, northern Borneo. Asian Primates Journal 2:36–41. Boonratana, R. 2013. Fragmentation and its significance on the conservation of proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus) in the Lower Kinabatangan, Sabah (North Borneo). Pp. 459–474 in Primates in fragments (L. K. Marsh and C. A. Chapman, eds.). Springer, New York. Bowdich, T. E. 1821. An analysis of the natural classifications of mammalia for students and travelers. J. Smith, Paris, France. Brandon-Jones, D., et al. 2004. Asian primate classification. International Journal of Primatology 25:97–164. Buffon, G. L. L., and C. S. Sonnini. 1799. Histoire Naturelle, Générale et Particulière. Tome trente-cinquieme. F. Dufart, Paris, France. Caton, M. J. 1998. The morphology of the gastrointestinal tract of Pygathrix nemaeus. Pp. 129–149 in Natural history of the duocs and snub-nosed monkeys (N. G. Jablonski, ed.). World Scientific, Singapore. Chaplin, G., and N. G. Jablonski. 1998. The integument of the “oddnosed” colobines. Pp. 77–104 in The natural history of the doucs 96 mammalian species47(926)—Nasalis larvatus and snub-nosed monkeys (N. G. Jablonski, ed.). World Scientific, Singapore. Chasen, F. N. 1940. A handlist of Malaysian mammals: a systematic list of the mammals of the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Borneo, and Java, including the adjacent small islands. Bulletin of the Raffles Museum, Singapore 15:1–209. Chen, Y., L. Luo, X. Shan, and X. Cao. 1979. The karyotype of the golden monkey (Rhinopithecus r. roxellanae). Journal of Human Evolution 8:597–602. Chiarelli, B. 1966. The chromosome complement of Nasalis larvatus (Wurmb 1781). Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences 22:797. Chivers, D. J. 1994. Functional anatomy of the gastrointestinal tract. Pp. 205–227 in Colobine monkeys: their ecology, behaviour, and evolution (A. G. Davies and J. F. Oates, eds.). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom. Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora. 2012. Appendices I, II and III. www.cites. org. Accessed 8 February 2012. Curran, L. M., et al. 2004. Lowland forest loss in protected areas of Indonesian Borneo. Science 303:1000–1003. Dahlbom, A. G. 1856. Studia zoologica, familias regni animalis naturales tractiantia. Sveirge, Lund, Sweden. Davis, D. D. 1962. Mammals of the lowland rainforests of North Borneo. Bulletin of the National Museum of Singapore 31:1–129. Delson, E. 1994. Evolutionary history of the colobine monkeys in palaeoenvironmental perspective. Pp. 11–43 in Colobine monkeys: their ecology, behaviour and evolution (A. G. Davies and J. F. Oates, eds.). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom. Desmarest, A. G. 1817. Nouveau dictionnaire d’histoire naturelle. Tome treizième. Virey, Paris, France. Desmarest, A. G. 1820. Mammalogie, ou description des espèces de mammifères. Premier partie. Chez Mme. Veuve Agasse, Paris, France. Desmoulins, A. 1825. Dictionnaire classique d’histoire naturelle. Tome VII. Rey et Gravier, Paris, France. Dierenfeld, E. S., F. W. Koontz, and R. S. Goldstein. 1992. Feed intake, digestion and passage of the proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus) in captivity. Primates 33:399–405. Dixson, A. F. 1987. Baculum length and copulatory behavior in primates. American Journal of Primatology 13:51–60. Elliot, D. G. 1913. A review of the primates. Vol. 3. Monographs of the American Museum of Natural History, New York. Fam, S. D., and V. Nijman. 2011. Spizaetus hawk-eagles as predators of arboreal colobines. Primates 52:105–110. Feilen, K. L., and A. J. Marshall. 2014. Sleeping site selection by proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus) in West Kalimantan, Indonesia. American Journal of Primatology 76:1127–1139. Fischer, J. B. 1829. Synopsis mammalium. J. G. Cottae, Stutgart, Germany. Fitch, W. T. 2000. Skull dimensions in relation to body size in nonhuman mammals: the causal bases for acoustic allometry. Zoology-Analysis of Complex Systems 103:40–58. Galdikas, B. M. F. 1985. Crocodile predation on a proboscis monkey in Borneo. Primates 26:495–496. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, É. 1812. Tableau des quadrumanes, ou des animaux composants le premier ordre des la classe des mammifères. pp. 85–122, 156–170 in Annales du museum d’historie naturelle. Tome dix-neuvieme (F. G. Cuvier, ed.). Dufour et Compagne, Paris, France. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, É. 1829. Cours de l’histoire naturelle des mammiferes. Pichon et Didier, Paris, France. Gervais, P. 1854. Histoire naturelle des mammifères, avec l’indication de leurs moeurs, et de leurs rapports avec les arts, le commerce et l’agriculture Tome I Primates, Cheiroptères, Insectivores et Rongeurs. L. Curmer, Paris, France. Gloger, C. W. L. 1841. Gemeinnütziges Hand-und Hilfsbuch der Naturgeschichte. I. Berlag von Aug. Schulz & Comp., Breslau, Poland (formerly Germany). Gmelin, J. F. 1788. Systema naturæ: per Regna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonomis, locis. Tomus III. Georg. Emanual Beer, Leipzig, Germany. Gorzitze, A. B. 1996. Birth-related behaviors in wild proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus). Primates 37:75–78. Gray, J. E. 1821. On the natural arrangement of vertebrose animals. The London Medical Repository 15:296–310. Gray, J. E. 1850. Vertebrata. Pp. 2–43 in The zoology of the voyage of HMS Samarang under the command of Captain Sir Edward Belcher, C.B., F.R.A.S., F.G.S., during the years 1843–1846 (J. E. Gray, J. Richardson, A. Adams, L. Reve, and A. White, eds.). Reeve and Benham, London, United Kingdom. Groves, C. P. 1970. The forgotten leaf-eaters and the phylogeny of the Colobinae. Pp. 555–587 in Old World monkeys: evolution, systematics, and behavior (J. R. Napier and P. H. Napier, eds.). Academic Press, New York. Groves, C. P. 2001. Primate taxonomy. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Groves, C. P. 2005. Order primates. Pp. 111–184 in Mammal species of the world: a taxonomic and geographic reference (D. E. Wilson and D. M. Reeder, eds.). 3rd ed. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Maryland. Groves, C., and R. Thorington. 1970. An annotated classification of the Cercopithecoidea. Pp. 629–644 in Old World monkeys: evolution, systematics, and behavior (J. R. Napier and P. H. Napier, eds.). Academic Press, New York. Grüter, C. C., I. Matsuda, P. Zhang, and D. Zinner. 2012. Multilevel societies in primates and other mammals: introduction to the special issue. International Journal of Primatology 33:993–1001. Guatelli-Steinberg, D. 2000. Linear enamel hypoplasia in gibbons (Hylobates lar carpenteri). American Journal of Physical Anthropology 112:395–410. Harding, L. E. 2012. The Nasalis affair. Taprobanica 4:88–91. Harrison, T. 1996. The palaeoecological context at Niah Cave, Sarawak: evidence from the primate fauna. Bulletin of the Indo-Pacific Association 14:90–100. Harrison, T. 2000. Archaeological and ecological implications of the primate fauna from prehistoric sites in Borneo. Bulletin of the IndoPacific Association 20 (Malaka Papers, Volume 4):113–136. Harrison, T., J. Krigbaum, and J. Manser. 2006. Primate biogeography and ecology on the Sunda Shelf Islands: a paleontological and zooarchaeological perspective. Pp. 331–372 in Developments in primatology: progress and prospects (S. M. Lehman and J. G. Fleagle, eds.). University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois. Hart, D. 2007. Predation on primates: a biogeographical analysis. Pp. 27–59 in Primate anti-predator strategies (S. L. Gursky and K. A. I. Nekaris, eds.). Springer, New York. Hasegawa, H., K. Matsuo, and M. Onuma. 2003. Enterobius (Colobenterobius) serratus sp. nov. (Nematoda: Oxyuridae) from the Proboscis Monkey, Nasalis larvatus (Wurmb, 1787) (Primates: Cercopithecidae: Colobinae), in Sarawak, Borneo, Malaysia. Comparative Parasitology 70:128–131. Hayssen, V. D., A. V. Tienhoven, A. V. Tienhoven, and S. A. Asdell. 1993. Asdell’s patterns of mammalian reproduction: a compendium of species-specific data. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, New York. Hollihn, U. 1973. Remarks on the breeding and maintenance of colobus monkeys Colobus guereza, proboscis monkeys Nasalis larvatus and douc langurs Pygathrix nemaeus in zoos. International Zoo Yearbook 13:185–188. Hon, J. 2011. SOS: save our swamps for peat’s sake. SANSAI: An Environmental Journal for the Global Community 5:51–65. International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature. 1929. Opinion 114. Under suspension. Simia, Simia satyrus, and Pithecus are suppressed. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections 73:423–424. International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature. 1954. Opinion 238. Validation, under the plenary powers, of the generic name Cercopithecus as from Linnaeus, 1758 (Class Mammalia). Opinions and Declarations of the International Commision on Zoological Nomenclature 4:25–26. Jablonski, N. G. 1998. The evolution of the douc and snub-nosed monkeys and the question of the phyletic unity of the odd-nosed colobines. Pp. 13–52 in The natural history of the doucs and snub-nosed monkeys (N. G. Jablonski, ed.). World Scientific, Singapore. Jablonski, N. G., D. Su, J. Kelley, L. I. Flynn, and X. Ji. 2011. The Mio-Pliocene colobine monkey, Mesopithecus, in China. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 144:174. 47(926)—Nasalis larvatus mammalian species97 Kartono, A. P., A. Ginting, and N. Santoso. 2008. Karakteristik habitat dan wilayah jelajah bekantan di hutan mangrove desa nipah panjang kecamantan batu ampar kabupaten kubu raya provinsi Kalimantan barat. Media Konservasi 13:1–61. Kawabe, M., and T. Mano. 1972. Ecology and behavior of the wild proboscis monkey, Nasalis larvatus (Wurmb) in Sabah, Malaysia. Primates 13:213–228. Kenagy, G. J., and S. C. Trombulak. 1986. Size and function of mammalian testes in relation to body size. Journal of Mammalogy 67:1–22. Kern, J. A. 1964. Observations on the habits of the proboscis monkey, Nasalis larvatus (Wurmb), made in the Brunei Bay area, Borneo. Zoologica 49:183–192. Kerr, R. 1792. The animal kingdom, or zoological system, of the celebrated Sir Charles Linnaeus; Class I Mammalia: containing a complete systematic description, arrangement, and nomenclature, of all the known species and varieties of the mammalia, or animals which give suck to their young. J. Murray & R. Faulder, London, United Kingdom. Kohda, M. 1985. Allomothering behaviour of New and Old World monkeys. Primates 26:28–44. Lacépède, B. G.-É. 1799. Discours d’ouverture et de clôture du cours d’histoire naturelle, l’An. VII de la République; et Tableaux méthodiques des mammifères et des oiseaux. Plassan, Paris, France. Latreille, P. A. 1801. Histoire naturelle des singes. Pp. 275–298 in Histoire naturel generale et particuliere par Leclerc de Buffon. Tome Premier (C. S. Sonnini, ed.). F. Dufart, Paris, France. Lesson, R. P. 1834. Histoire naturelle generale et parciculiere de mammiferes et des oiseaux decouverts depuis la mort de Buffon. Tome IV Suite des Mammiferes. Pourrat Freres Editeurs, Paris, France. Liedigk, R., et al. 2012. Evolutionary history of the odd-nosed monkeys and the phylogenetic position of the newly described Myanmar snubnosed monkey Rhinopithecus strykeri. PLoS One 7:e37418. Linnaeus, C. 1758. Systema naturae per regna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis. Editio decima, reformata. Holmiae [1–4]. Tomus I. Laurentii Salvii, Stockholm, Sweden. Maier, W. 2000. Ontogeny of the nasal capsule in cercopithecoids: a contribution to the comparative and evolutionary morphology of catarrhines. Pp. 99–131 in Old World monkeys (P. F. Whitehead and C. J. Jolly, eds.). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom. Manansang, J., K. Traylor-Holzer, D. Reed, and K. Leus. 2005. Indonesian proboscis monkey population and habitat viability assessment: final report. International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources/Species Survival Commission Conservation Breeding Specialist Group, Apple Valley, Minnesota. Martin, W. C. L. 1837. Notes on the anatomy of the proboscis monkey (Simia nasalis). Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 5:70–73. Martin, W. C. L. 1841. A general introduction to the natural history of mammiferous animals: with a particular view of the physical history of Man and the more closely allied genera of quadrumanes, or monkeys. Vol. 1. Wright and Co., London, United Kingdom. Matsuda, I. 2008. Feeding and ranging behaviors of proboscis monkey Nasalis larvatus in Sabah, Malaysia. Ph.D. dissertation, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan. Matsuda, I., Y. Akiyama, A. Tuuga, H. Bernard, and M. Clauss. 2014a. Daily feeding rhythm in proboscis monkeys: a preliminary comparison with other non-human primates. Primates 55:313–326. Matsuda, I., S. Higashi, Y. Otani, A. Tuuga, H. Bernard, and R. T. Corlett. 2013a. A short note on seed dispersal by colobines: the case of the proboscis monkey. Integrative Zoology 8:395–399. Matsuda, I., et al. 2011a. Regurgitation and remastication in the foregut-fermenting proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus). Biology Letters 7:786–789. Matsuda, I., A. Tuuga, Y. Akiyama, and S. Higashi. 2008a. Selection of river crossing location and sleeping site by proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus) in Sabah, Malaysia. American Journal of Primatology 70:1097–1101. Matsuda, I., A. Tuuga, and H. Bernard. 2011b. Riverine refuging by proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus) and sympatric primates: Implications for adaptive benefits of the riverine habitat. Mammalian Biology-Zeitschrift für Säugetierkunde 76:165–171. Matsuda, I., A. Tuuga, H. Bernard, and T. Furuichi. 2012a. Interindividual relationships in proboscis monkeys: a preliminary comparison with other non-human primates. Primates 53:13–23. Matsuda, I., A. Tuuga, H. Bernard, J. Sugau, and G. Hanya. 2013b. Leaf selection by two Bornean colobine monkeys in relation to plant chemistry and abundance. Scientific Reports 3 (1873), doi:10.1038/ srep01873. Matsuda, I., et al. 2014b. Faecal particle size in free-ranging primates supports a ‘rumination’ strategy in the proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus). Oecologia 174:1127–1137. Matsuda, I., A. Tuuga, and S. Higashi. 2008b. Clouded leopard (Neofelis diardi) predation on proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus) in Sabah, Malaysia. Primates 49:227–231. Matsuda, I., A. Tuuga, and S. Higashi. 2009a. The feeding ecology and activity budget of proboscis monkeys. American Journal of Primatology 71:478–492. Matsuda, I., A. Tuuga, and S. Higashi. 2009b. Ranging behavior of proboscis monkeys in a riverine forest with special reference to ranging in inland forest. International Journal of Primatology 30:313–325. Matsuda, I., A. Tuuga, and S. Higashi. 2010a. Effects of water level on sleeping-site selection and inter-group association in proboscis monkeys: why do they sleep alone inland on flooded days? Ecological Research 25:475–482. Matsuda, I., T. Kubo, A. Tuuga, and S. Higashi. 2010b. A Bayesian analysis of the temporal change of local density of proboscis monkeys: implications for environmental effects on a multilevel society. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 142:235–245. Matsuda, I., et al. 2012b. Comparisons of intraunit relationships in nonhuman primates living in multilevel social systems. International Journal of Primatology 33:1038–1053. McNeely, J. A., K. R. Miller, W. V. Reid, R. A. Mittermeir, and T. B. Warner. 1990. Conserving the world biological diversity. International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources, Gland, Switzerland. Md. Zain, B. M., et al. 2010. Phylogenetic relationships of Malaysian monkeys, Cercopithecidae, based on mitochondrial cytochrome c sequences. Genetics and Molecular Research 9:1987–1996. Medway, L. 1977. Mammals of Borneo. Field keys and annotated checklist. Monograph Malayan Branch Royal Asiatic Society No. 7. Meijaard, E., and V. Nijman. 2000a. Distribution and conservation of the proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus) in Kalimantan, Indonesia. Biological Conservation 92:15–24. Meijaard, E., and V. Nijman. 2000b. The local extinction of the proboscis monkey Nasalis larvatus in Pulau Kaget Nature Reserve, Indonesia. Oryx 34:66–70. Meijaard, E., V. Nijman, and J. Supriatna. 2008. Nasalis larvatus in International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources 2011. International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural resources red list of threatened species, version 2011.1. www. iucnredlist.org. Accessed 27 July 2011. Meyer, D., D. Rinaldi, H. Ramlee, D. Perwitasari-Farajallah, J. K. Hodges, and C. Roos. 2011. Mitochondrial phylogeny of leaf monkeys (genus Presbytis, Eschscholtz, 1821) with implications for taxonomy and conservation. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 59:311–319. Mulder, I. 2012. The proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus) social group sructures. Thesis, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands. Munshi-South, J., and H. Bernard. 2011. Genetic diversity and distinctiveness of the proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus) of the Klias Peninsula, Sabah, Malaysia. Journal of Heredity 102:342–346. Murai, T. 2004. Social behaviors of all-male proboscis monkeys when joined by females. Ecological Research 19:451–454. Murai, T. 2006. Mating behaviors of the proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus). American Journal of Primatology 68:832–837. 98 mammalian species47(926)—Nasalis larvatus Murai, T., M. Mohamed, H. Bernard, P. A. Mahedi, R. Saburi, and S. Higashi. 2007. Female transfer between one-male groups of proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus). Primates 48:117–121. Myers, S. 2009. Birds of Borneo - Brunei, Sabah, Sarawak, and Kalimantan. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey. Napier, J. 1963. The locomotor functions of hominids. Pp. 178–189 in Classification and human evolution (S. L. Washburn, ed.). Aldine Publishing Co., Chicago, Illinois. Nijboer, J., E. S. Dierenfeld, C. P. Yeager, E. L. Bennett, W. Bleisch, and A. H. Mitchell. 2006. Chemical composition of Southeast Asian colobine foods. Pp. 43–49 in Fibre intake and faeces quality in leaf-eating primates (J. Nijboer, ed.). Ph.D. dissertation, Universiteit Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands. Nijman, V., and E. Meijaard. 2008. Zoogeography of primates in insular Southeast Asia: species-area relationships and the effects of taxonomy. Contributions to Zoology 77:117–126. Nowak, R. M. 1999. Walker’s mammals of the world. 6th ed., Vol. I. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Maryland. Nowell, K., and P. Jackson. 2010. Wild cats: status survey and conservation action plan. International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources-Species Survival Commission Cat Specialist Group, Gland, Switzerland. Oates, J. F., A. G. Davies, and E. Delson. 1994. The diversity of living colobines. Pp. 45–74 in Colobine monkeys: their ecology, behaviour and evolution (A. G. Davies and J. F. Oates, eds.). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom. Ogata, M., and S. Seino. 2014. Genetic analysis of captive proboscis monkeys. Zoo Biology 34:76–99. Pan, R., C. Groves, and C. Oxnard. 2004. Relationships between the fossil colobine Mesopithecus pentelicus and extant cercopithecoids, based on dental metrics. American Journal of Primatology 62:287–299. Pan, R., and C. P. Groves. 2004. Cranial variation among the Asian colobines. Pp. 45–65 in Shaping primate evolution (F. C. Anapol, R. Z. German and N. G. Jablonski, eds.). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom. Peng, Y., and R. Pan. 1994. Systematic classification of Asian colobines. Human Evolution 9:25–33. Peng, Y., R. Pan, and N. G. Jablonski. 1993. Classification and evolution of Asian colobines. Folia Primatologica 60:106–117. Pryer, W. B. 1881. Animal life in Borneo. The Zoologist. Third Series 5:393–398. Purba, E. F. B. 2009. Studi keanekaragaman jenis tumbuhan pakan bekantan (Nasalis Larvatus) di Taman Nasional Tanjung Puting, Kalimantan Tengah. Undergraduate thesis, Agricultural University of Bogor, Bogor, Indonesia. Rachmawan, D. 2006. Populasi dan penyebaran bekantan (Nasalis larvatus Wurmb, 1781) di Sungai Kendilo Hutan Lindung, Gunung Lumut, Kalimantan Timur. Thesis, Bogor Agricultural University, Bogor, Indonesia. Rajanathan, R., and E. L. Bennett. 1990. Notes on the social behaviour of wild proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus). Malayan Nature Journal 44:35–44. Ravosa, M. J. 1996. Jaw morphology and function in living and fossil Old World monkeys. International Journal of Primatology 17:909–932. Ridzwan Ali, M., H. Bernard, and G. Hanya. 2009. The population size and distribution of proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus) based on a brief study in Garama, Klias Peninsula, Sabah, Malaysia. Journal of Tropical Biology and Conservation 5:67–70. Roos, C., et al. 2011. Nuclear versus mitochondrial DNA: evidence for hybridization in colobine monkeys. BMC Evolutionary Biology 11:77. Röper, K. M., et al. 2014. Vocal acoustics in the endangered proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus). American Journal of Primatology 76:192–201. Salgado-Lynn, M., D. W. G. Stanton, R. Sakong, J. Cable, B. Goossens, and M. Bruford. 2010. Microsatellite markers for the proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus). Conservation Genetics Resources 2(Supplement 1):1–5. Salter, R., N. MacKenzie, N. Nightingale, K. Aken, and P. Chai. 1985. Habitat use, ranging behaviour and food habits of the proboscis monkey, Nasalis larvatus (van Wurmb) in Sarawak. Primates 26:436–451. Schultz, A. H. 1938. The relative weight of the testes in primates. The Anatomical Record 72:387–394 (not seen, cited by Kenagy and Trombulak 1986). Schultz, A. H. 1942. Growth and development of the proboscis monkey. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College 89:279–314. Schultz, A. H. 1972. Developmental abnormalities. Pp. 158–189 in Pathology of simian primates (R. N. T.-W. Fiennes, ed.). Karger, Basel, Switzerland. Sha, J. C. M., S. Alagappasamy, S. Chandran, K. M. Cho, and B. Guha. 2012. Establishment of a captive all-male group of proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus) at the Singapore Zoo. Zoo Biology 32:281–290. Sha, J. C. M., H. Bernard, and S. Nathan. 2008. Status and conservation of proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus) in Sabah, East Malaysia. Primate Conservation 23:107–120. Shaw, G. 1800. General zoology or systematic natural history. Vol. 1. Part 1. Mammalia. G. Kearsley, London, United Kingdom. Soendjoto, M. A. 2005. Adaptasi bekantan (Nasalis larvatus Wurmb) terhadap hutan karet: studi kasus di Kabupaten Tabalong, Kalimantan Selatan. Ph.D. dissertation, Institut Pertanian Bogor, Bogor, Indonesia. Soendjoto, M. A., J. Djami’at, and D. Hairani. 2003. Bekantan juga hidup di hutan karet. Warta Konservasi Lahan Basah 10:27–28. Soendjoto, M. A., H. Suyanto, A. Purnama, A. Rafiqi, and S. Sjukran. 2008. Keanekaragaman tanaman pada hutan rakyat di Kabupaten Tanah Laut, Kalimantan Selatan. Biodiversitas 9:142–147. Soma, H., and K. Benirchke. 1977. Observations on the fetus and placenta of a proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus). Primates 18:277–284. Spoor, F. 1997. Basicranial architecture and relative brain size of Sts 5 (Australopithecus africanus) and other Plio-Pleistocene hominids. South African Journal of Science 93:182–186. Srivathsan, A., and R. Meier. 2011. Proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus (Wurmb, 1787)) have unusually high-pitched vocalizations. The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 59:319–323. Stanyon, R., et al. 2008. Primate chromosome evolution: ancestral karyotypes, marker order and neocentromeres. Chromosome Research 16:17–39. Stark, D. J., V. Nijman, S. Lhota, J. G. Robins, and B. Goossens. 2012. Modeling population viability of local proboscis monkey Nasalis larvatus populations: conservation implications. Endangered Species Research 16:31–43. Sterner, K. N., R. L. Raaum, Y.-P. Zhang, C.-B. Stewart, and T. R. Disotell. 2006. Mitochondrial data support an odd-nosed colobine clade. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 40:1–7. Stiles, C. W., and M. B. Orleman. 1926. Retention of Cercopithecus, Type Diana, for the Guenons. Journal of Mammalogy 7:48–53. Suwarto. 2015. Habitat suitability for proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus Wurmb, 1781) in the mangrove Kutai National Park. Masters thesis, Bogor Agricultural University, Bogor, Indonesia. Tisdell, C. A., and H. S. Nantha. 2007. Conservation of the proboscis monkey and the orangutan in Borneo: comparative issues and economic considerations. Economics, Ecology and the Environment Working Paper 138, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. Vigors, N. A., and T. Horsfield. 1828. Gen. Naslis, Geoff. Zoological Journal IV:109–110. von Schreber, J. C. D. 1775. Die säugethiere in abbildungen nach der natur mit beschreibungen. Vol. I. Wolfgang Walther, Erlangen, Germany. von Wurmb, F. 1781. Bijdragen tot de natuurlijke historie door F. baron v. d. Wurmb. III. Verhandelingen van het Bataviaasch genootschap van Kunsten en Wetenschappen, Batavia [Jakarta], Indonesia. Wang, X. P., et al. 2012. Phylogenetic relationships among the colobine monkeys revisited: new insights from analyses of complete mt genomes and 44 nuclear non-coding markers. PLoS One 7:e36274. Whittaker, D. J., N. Ting, and D. J. Melnick. 2006. Molecular phylogenetic affnities of the simakobu monkey (Simias concolor). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 39:887–892. Yasaningthias, G. 2010. Aktivitas makan, kuantitas dan kualitas pakan pada bekantan (Nasalis larvatus) yang diberi berbagai jenis pakan di Taman Safari Indonesia. Masters thesis, Bogor Agricultural University, Bogor, Indonesia. 47(926)—Nasalis larvatus mammalian species99 Yeager, C. P. 1989. Feeding ecology of the proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus). International Journal of Primatology 10:497–530. Yeager, C. P. 1990a. Notes on the sexual behavior of the proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus). American Journal of Primatology 21:223–227. Yeager, C. P. 1990b. Proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus) social organization: group structure. American Journal of Primatology 20:95–106. Yeager, C. P. 1991a. Possible antipredator behavior associated with river crossings by proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus). American Journal of Primatology 24:61–66. Yeager, C. P. 1991b. Proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus) social organization: intergroup patterns of association. American Journal of Primatology 23:73–86. Yeager, C. P. 1992. Proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus) social organization: nature and possible functions of intergroup patterns of association. American Journal of Primatology 26:133–137. Yeager, C. P. 1995. Does intraspecific variation in social systems explain reported differences in the social structure of the proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus)? Primates 36:575–582. Yeager, C. P., and T. K. Blondal. 1992. Conservation status of proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus) at Tanjung Puting National Park, Central Kalimantan, Indonesia. Pp. 220–228 in Forest biology and conservation in Borneo (G. Ismail, M. Mohamed, and S. Omar, eds.). Yayasan Sabah Center for Borneo Studies Publication 2, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia. Yeager, C. P., S. Silver, and E. Dierenfeld. 1997. Mineral and phytochemical influences on foliage selection by the proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus). American Journal of Primatology 41:117–128. Youlatos, D., S. Couette, and G. D. Koufos. 2012. A functional multivariate analysis of Mesopithecus (Primates: Colobinae) humeri from the Turolian of Greece. Journal of Human Evolution 63:219–230. Zhang, Y.-P., and O. A. Ryder. 1998. Mitochondrial cytochrome b gene sequences of Old World monkeys: with special reference on evolution of Asian colobines. Primates 39:39–49. Zimmermann, E., and U. Radespiel. 2007. Primate life histories. Pp. 1163–1205 in Handbook of paleoanthropology: primate evolution and human origins. Vol. 2 (W. Henke and I. Tattersall, eds.). SpringerVerlag, New York. Associate Editor and Editor of this account was Meredith J. Hamilton.