THIS PRIMATE IS ON THE BRINK OF EXTINCTION. ROPE BRIDGES COULD SAVE IT
For animals that spend
most of their lives high in the trees, gaps in the forest might as well be the
Grand Canyon. These chasms are especially hard on gibbons; although larger
males can leap across some canopy gaps, females and juveniles can be cut off
from food, companions, and even potential mates. Now, a new study suggests a
couple of sturdy ropes could literally help bridge the gap.
Gibbons are at risk of
extinction across Southeast Asia, largely because of habitat loss. With
just 30 individuals left, the Hainan gibbon (Nomascus hainanus) is
considered the rarest primate on Earth. All of these animals live on the
Bawangling National Nature Reserve in Hainan, an island province in southern
China. In July 2014, a typhoon caused landslides across the reserve, creating
gaps in the forest canopy that were difficult for these primates to cross.
To help reconnect the
habitats, professional tree climbers installed an artificial “bridge” across a
15-meter-wide gully, made of two mountaineering-grade ropes. Nearly 6 months
later, the gibbons started to use the bridge to traverse the gully, researchers report today
in Scientific Reports. The team documented 52 crossings in a group
of eight gibbons, with most walking along one rope while holding on to the
second rope for support, which the scientist’s dubbed “handrailing.” The
gibbons also shimmied underneath the ropes using all limbs (like sloths) and
swung along the ropes using just their arms.
Conservationists
previously built artificial bridges to help other treebound species such as the
Bornean orangutan and the Javan slow loris. And both the lar and western
hook Gibbon cross forest gaps. But this is the first example of the rare Hainan
gibbon using them. The rope bridges could be a short-term solution to reconnect
disjointed habitats, the researchers argue, coupled with efforts to replenish
natural forest cover.
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