Socioecology of Cat Ba Langurs (Trachypithecus poliocephalus): Implications for Conservation
Abstract
Cat Ba langurs (Trachypithecus poliocephalus), endemic
to Cat Ba Island (Vietnam), are a member of the limestone langur
group (francoisi species-group) found in Laos, Vietnam, and
China. With less than 75 individuals in the world, these Cat Ba
langurs are Critically Endangered. This dissertation represents
the first long-term behavioural study of the species (549 contact
hours across 11 months), and provides socioecological information
for two groups (n=17-20) living on the Cua Dong fjord, which can
be used in conservation management. Like most other colobines,
the majority of the Cat Ba langur diet is leaves (84% of their
dietary budget). This may explain their activity budget, which
is primarily inactivity (55% of their activity budget), followed
by foraging (19%) and social behaviour and locomotion (12% each).
Activity and dietary budgets vary seasonally, with animals
spending more time in social behaviours in the wet season, when
they eat more fruit, and more time in foraging in the dry season,
when leaves are ingested more, suggesting they are energy
maximisers. In addition, age differences were found, with adults
spending the most time in social behaviours and resting. Social
behaviour primarily includes grooming and playing with others -
play is more common in younger animals, while older animals tend
to groom more. Overall, they spend 58% of their days not in
proximity to any other langurs. Adult males spend the most time
alone, and seem to avoid young langurs. Disputes tend to be
between adult females, and two females only tend to come together
if there is a young langur acting as a ‘social glue’. Home
ranges varied between groups with the larger group’s range
being 50ha compared to just 22ha for the smaller group. In both
areas, rocks and sparsely covered areas are used most often,
which is due to the shrubby, discontinuous vegetation. Most of
the langurs’ observable time is spent on exposed slopes (47%),
followed by steep cliffs (38%), summits (11%), valleys (3%), and
the ground (1%); this varied seasonally, likely to balance
foraging needs with thermoregulation. The langurs used 22
sleeping sites, including ledges (61%) and caves (17%). When
newborn, Cat Ba langurs are bright orange. They start to lose
this natal coat as an infant, and become much darker during the
young juvenile stage. As individuals age, they also become more
independent and start to forage and locomote more on their own.
These reported behaviours can be used to create a baseline for
activity budgets, home range size, and habitat use, and
development and maturation that can be used for comparative
purposes in future studies. Results find that animals are
behaviourally similar to other related species and their biggest
threat is likely their small, fragmented population structure.
To combat this, I support habitat protection, patrols, and
enforcement; education and training; habitat corridors; and
limiting the human population, as these support an entire
ecosystem while teaching locals the importance of biodiversity,
reducing resource competition, and fragmentation from
infrastructure, and providing a means for the langurs themselves
to disperse.
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Keywords
behaviour, behavior, Cat Ba langur, limestone langur, Trachypithecus poliocephalus, socioecology, activity budget, dietary budget, Cat Ba island, ranging patterns, habitat use, sleeping sites, home range, social behaviour, proximity, development, pelage, physical ontogeny, habitat protection, conservation, Cat Ba Langur Conservation Project, Vietnam, habitat corridors, translocations, ecotourism, education and training, captive breeding, behavioural indicators, habitat degradation, locomotion, ecotourism
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