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Siamang

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Siamang[1]
Temporal range: Middle Pleistocene-Present[2]
CITES Appendix I (CITES)[4]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Primates
Suborder: Haplorhini
Infraorder: Simiiformes
Family: Hylobatidae
Genus: Symphalangus
Gloger, 1841
Species:
S. syndactylus
Binomial name
Symphalangus syndactylus
(Raffles, 1821)
Distribution of the siamang

The siamang (/ˈsəmæŋ/, also UK: /ˈsə-/;[5][6] Symphalangus syndactylus) is an endangered arboreal, black-furred gibbon native to the forests of Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand. The largest of the gibbons, the siamang can be twice the size of other gibbons, reaching 1 m (3.3 ft) in height, and weighing up to 14 kg (31 lb). It is the only species in the genus Symphalangus. Fossils of siamangs date back to the Middle Pleistocene.[2]

Two features distinguish the siamang from other gibbons. First, two digits on each foot—the second and third toes—are partially joined by a membrane, hence the specific name syndactylus, from the Ancient Greek σύν, sun-, "with" + δάκτυλος, daktulos, "finger". Second, a large gular sac (throat pouch), found in both males and females of the species, can be inflated to the size of the siamang's head, allowing it to make resonating calls.

Two subspecies of the siamang are the nominate Sumatran siamang (S. s. syndactylus) and the Malaysian siamang (S. s. continentis, in Malay Peninsula).[7] Otherwise, the Malaysian individuals are only a population. The siamang occurs sympatrically with other gibbons; its two ranges are entirely within the combined ranges of the agile gibbon and the lar gibbon.

The siamang can live to around 40 years in captivity.[8]

While the illegal pet trade takes a toll on wild populations, the principal threat to the siamang is habitat loss in both Indonesia and Malaysia. The palm oil production industry is clearing large swaths of forest, reducing the habitat of the siamang, along with those of other species, such as the Sumatran tiger.

Description

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A close-up of adult male's head

The siamang has long, dense, shaggy hair, which is the darkest shade of all gibbons. The ape's long, gangling arms are longer than its legs. The average length of a siamang is 90 cm; the largest they have ever grown is 150 cm. The face of this large gibbon is mostly hairless, apart from a thin mustache.

Distribution and habitat

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The siamang inhabits the forest remnants of Sumatra Island and the Malay Peninsula, and is widely distributed from lowland forest to mountain forest—even rainforest—and can be found at altitudes up to 3800 m.[9] It lives in groups of up to six individuals (four individuals on average) with an average home range of 23 hectares.[10][11] Their day ranges are substantially smaller than those of sympatric Hylobates species, often less than 1 km.[9] The siamang's melodious singing breaks the forest's silence in the early morning after the agile gibbons' or lar gibbons' calls. The siamangs in Sumatra and the Malay Peninsula are similar in appearance, but some behaviors differ between the two populations.

Ecology and behavior

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Siamangs have an ecology and relationship between two types of gibbons that share the same habitat. Those include the Agile gibbon and Lar gibbon. Both of the gibbons that live with the siamangs are Hylobates rather than Symphalangus. When two siamangs meet, they often have a bond with each other. They might also communicate by using their throat pouches and shouts to communicate when they feel excited, relaxed, trying to mate, or threatened. If siamangs use loud sounds, they also use body language to communicate. They use sign language or pointing to make others aware of what they need or what they want to do.

Diet

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The siamang eats mainly various parts of plants. The Sumatran siamang is more frugivorous than its Malayan relative, with fruit making up to 60% of its diet. The siamang eats at least 160 species of plants, from vines to woody plants. Its major food source is figs (Ficus spp.).[11][12] The siamang prefers to eat ripe rather than unripe fruit, and young rather than old leaves. It eats flowers and a few animals, mostly insects. When the siamang eats large flowers, it eats only the corollae (petals), but it eats all parts of smaller flowers, with the small fruit collected in its hand before being consumed. When it eats big and hard seeds or seeds with sharp edges, it peels out the fruit flesh and throws away the seed.[12] Although its diet consists of substantial portions of fruit, it is the most folivorous of all members of Hylobatidae.[9] As it is also the largest gibbon, it fits well with the general primate dietary trend in which larger primates tend to be more folivorous.[13]

Demography and population

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A group of siamangs normally consists of an adult dominant male, an adult dominant female, with offspring, infants, and sometimes a subadult. The subadult usually leaves the group after attaining the age of 6–8 years; subadult females tend to leave the group earlier than subadult males. Siamang gestation period is between 6.2 and 7.9 months; after the infant is born, the mother takes care of the infant for the first year of its life.[14] Siamang males tend to offer more paternal care than do other members of the family Hylobatidae, taking up a major role in carrying an infant after it is about 8 months old.[9] The infant typically returns to its mother to sleep and nurse. The infant begins to travel independently from its parents by its third year of life.[15]

Siamangs are generally known to have monogamous mating pairs, which have been documented to spend more time in close proximity to each other, in comparison to other gibbon species.[16] Both monogamous and polyandrous groups, though, are found in South Sumatra.[14] In studying these populations, infants belonging to monogamous groups were found to receive more overall male care than infants in the polyandrous groups. This reduced care is most likely due to reduced certainty of paternity in these groups.[14]

Habitat disturbance affects siamang group composition; it is varied in age-sex structure between intact forest and burnt, regrown forest. The burnt, regrown forest population contained more adult and subadults than the intact forest population, which had more infants, small juveniles, and large juveniles. Infant survival rates in burnt, regrown forest groups are lower than in intact forest groups. The number of individuals in the latter is higher than in the former.[11] The siamang in disturbed forests live in small groups and have a density lower than in intact forests because of lack of food resources and trees for living.

In the 1980s, the Indonesian population of the siamang in the wild was estimated to be 360,000 individuals.[17] This figure may be less in the 21st century: Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park is the third-largest protected area (3,568 km2 or 1,378 sq mi) in Sumatra, of which roughly 2,570 km2 (990 sq mi) remain under forest cover inhabited by 22,390 siamangs (in 2002 censuses). In Sumatra, the siamang prefers to inhabit lowland forest between 500 and 1,000 m (1,600 and 3,300 ft) above sea level.[10]

Behavior

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The siamang tends to rest for more than half of its waking period from dawn to dusk, followed by feeding, moving, foraging, and social activities. It takes more rest during midday, taking time to groom others or to play. During resting time, it usually uses a branch of a large tree, lying on its back or belly. Feeding behaviors, foraging, and moving are most often in the morning and after resting. Grooming is one of the most important social interactions among family members. Grooming takes place between adults earlier in the day; the adults groom the juveniles later in the day. Adult males are the most involved in grooming.[15]

A siamang group at rest in Sumatra, Indonesia - siamangs rest up to 50% of their waking hours.

In the dry season, the size of the siamang's daily range is larger than in the rainy season. The siamang in southern Sumatra spends less time foraging than siamangs in other places, as it eats a diet higher in fruit. It thus consumes more nutrients, which results in less time needed for food acquisition. A siamang may spend an entire day in a single fruiting tree, moving out when it wants to rest and returning to feed.[12]

Siamangs are a very social species of primates and exhibit a variety of tactile and visual gestures, along with actions and facial expressions to communicate and increase social bonds within their family group.[18] They are also territorial, and interact with other family groups by making loud calls to let other groups know where their territory is. The calls may be asynchronous, where they are not directed at a particular neighbouring group, or simultaneous group calls may take place across the territory boundary. Males are known to chase one another across the boundary.[15]

Grooming frequency between males and females has been found to correlate to copulation frequency, as well as bouts of aggression. Pairs copulate over four to five months at intervals of two to three years. The peak of their reproductive activity is often during the time when fruit is most abundant.[15] Dorsoventral copulation is the most common type in siamangs, where the female is squatting and the male hangs by his arms and grips the female with his legs, whereas ventroventral copulation, where both primates are suspended, occurs only one in 60 times on average.[15]

Role of calling

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Siamang calling with throat sac inflated
Siamangs' call
Siamang, Sumatra, 2022

The siamang starts its day by calling in the early morning; it calls less after midday, with the peak of the calls around 9:00 to 10:00 am. Most of the siamang's calls are directed to its neighbours rather than to those inside its home range. This means the siamang's calling is in response to disturbances and to defend its territory. Calls in the late morning typically happen when it meets or sees another siamang group. The edge of the siamang's home range, which may overlap another, is often the place where calling is made. Counter (co-response) calling occasionally happens near the border or in the overlap area. Calls are numerous when fruit is more abundant rather than when it is less available. Branch shaking, swinging, and moving around the tree crowns accompany the calling. This movement might be to show the other groups where they are.

The siamang prefers calling in the living, tall, and big trees, possibly where another group is easy to see. Besides that, such trees can support siamang movement. Calling trees are usually near feeding trees, but sometimes they call in the feeding trees.[12][19]

Mated pairs produce loud, well-patterned calling bouts, which are referred to as duetting. These calls advertise the presence and status of a mated pair.[7] Newly formed pairs spend more time singing than an established pair. Advertising the presence of a strong bond is advantageous in territorial defense.[20] Siamang duetting differs from other species because it has a particularly complex vocal structure. Four distinct classes of vocalizations have been documented: booms, barks, ululating screams, and bitonal screams. Females typically produce long barks and males generally produce bitonal screams, but both sexes have been known to produce all four classes of vocalizations.[21] Unlike other gibbons in which vocalization is added by laterally expanded laryngeal sacs, those in siamangs fuse with each other and extend into the ventral area of the neck.[22]

Seeding

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As a frugivorous animal, the siamang disperses seeds through defecation as it travels across its territory. The siamang can carry seed while digesting, and defecate between 81.9 and 365.9 m (269 and 1,200 ft) from the seed resource, which supports the forest's regeneration and succession.[23]

Threats and conservation

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As an arboreal primate whose survival absolutely depends on the forest, the siamang faces population pressure due to habitat loss,[10] poaching, and hunting.[17][24]

Habitat loss

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Siamang, Tierpark Hellabrunn, Munich, Germany

A major threat to the siamang is habitat fragmentation due to plantations, forest fire, illegal logging, encroachment, and human development. Firstly, palm-oil plantations have removed large areas of the siamang's habitat in recent decades. Since 2002, 107,000 km2 of oil palm have been planted,[25] which has replaced much rainforest in Indonesia and Malaysia, where the siamang originally lived. Secondly, in the second decade of the 21st century, forests in the Malay Peninsula have been destroyed due to illegal logging. Sixteen out of the 37 permanent forest reserves in Kelantan, in the Malay Peninsula, where most of the siamangs live, have been encroached upon by illegal loggers.[26] Thirdly, forest encroachments change forest cover into cultivated land; for example, the rising price of coffee in 1998 encouraged people in Sumatra to replace the forest with coffee plantations.[27] Fourthly, development in many areas requires infrastructure, such as roads, which now divide conservation areas and have caused forest fragmentation and edge effects.

Poaching and hunting

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Unlike other parts of Asia, primates are not hunted for their meat in Indonesia. They are hunted for the illegal pet trade, with hunters preferring infant siamangs. Poachers often kill the mothers first, since siamang females are highly protective of their infants, and removing the infant without first killing the mother requires more effort. Most siamangs on the market are infants, which often die during transportation.[17][24]

Conservation

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Siamang can be found in at least 11 protected areas:

Indonesia
Malaysia
Thailand

References

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  1. ^ Groves, C. P. (2005). "Order Primates". In Wilson, D. E.; Reeder, D. M (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 181. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
  2. ^ a b K. Suraprasit, J.-J. Jaegar, Y. Chaimanee, O. Chavasseau, C. Yamee, P. Tian, and S. Panha (2016). "The Middle Pleistocene vertebrate fauna from Khok Sung (Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand): biochronological and paleobiogeographical implications". ZooKeys (613): 1–157. Bibcode:2016ZooK..613....1S. doi:10.3897/zookeys.613.8309. PMC 5027644. PMID 27667928.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ a b Nijman, V.; Geissmann, T.; Traeholt, C.; Roos, C.; Nowak, M.G. (2020). "Symphalangus syndactylus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T39779A17967873. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-2.RLTS.T39779A17967873.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  4. ^ "Appendices | CITES". cites.org. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  5. ^ "siamang". Lexico. Archived from the original on 2022-04-26. Retrieved 2022-04-26.
  6. ^ "Definition of siamang | Dictionary.com". www.dictionary.com. Retrieved 2022-02-14.
  7. ^ a b Geissmann, Thomas. "Gibbon Systematics and Species Identification". Retrieved 2006-04-13.
  8. ^ Gron KJ. 2008 May 20. Primate Factsheets: Siamang (Symphalangus syndactylus) Taxonomy, Morphology, & Ecology . http://pin.primate.wisc.edu/factsheets/entry/siamang>. Accessed 2015 June 9.
  9. ^ a b c d Rowe, Noel. (1996) "Pictorial Guide to the Living Primates" Charlestown, RI: Pagonia Press
  10. ^ a b c O'Brien, T.G.; M.F. Kinnaird; A. Nurcahyo; M. Iqbal & M. Rusmanto (2004). "Abundance and Distribution of Sympatric Gibbons in a Threatened Sumatran Rainforest". International Journal of Primatology. 25 (2): 267–284. doi:10.1023/B:IJOP.0000019152.83883.1c. S2CID 32472118.
  11. ^ a b c O'Brien, T. G.; M. F. Kinnaird; A. Nurcahyo; M. Prasetyaningrum; Dan M. Iqbal (2003). "Fire, demography and persistence of siamangs (Symphalangus syndactylus: Hylobatidae) in a Sumatran rainforest". Animal Conservation. 6 (2): 115. doi:10.1017/S1367943003003159. S2CID 86035086.
  12. ^ a b c d Nurcahyo, A. (2001). Daily Ranging, Home-Range, Foods, Feeding and Calling in Siamang (Hylobates syndactylus). In WCS-IP 2001. Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park in Space and Time. 2000 -2001 Research Report. WCS-IP/ PHKA, Bogor. 35–52. (In Indonesian)
  13. ^ Fleagle J. G. (1988). Size and Adaptation in Primates. In Jungers WL (ed). "Size and Scaling in Primate Biology". New York: Plenum Press.
  14. ^ a b c Lappan, Susan. (2008). "Male Care of Infants in a Siamang (Symphalangus syndactylus) Population including Socially Monogamous and Polyandrous Groups". Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 62(8): 1307–1317.
  15. ^ a b c d e Chivers, David J. (1976). Communication within and between family groups of siamang (Symphalangus syndactylus). Behaviour 57 (1-2): 116-135.
  16. ^ Palombit, Ryne A. (1996). “Pair Bonds in Monogamous Apes: A Comparison of the Siamang, Hylobates syndactylus, and the White-Handed Gibbon Hylobates lar. Behaviour. 133 (5) 321-356.
  17. ^ a b c Nijman, V. (2005). In Full Swing: An Assessment of Trade in Orang-Utans and Gibbons on Java and Bali, Indonesia. A Traffict Southeast Asia Report. Traffic Southeast Asia
  18. ^ Liebal, Pika, and Tomasello. (2004). “Social Communication in Siamangs (Symphalangus syndactylus): use of gestures and facial expressions” Primates. 45(1): 41-57.
  19. ^ Kinnaird, M. F.; O’Brien, T. G.; Nurcahyo, A. & Prasetyaningrum, M. (2002). "Intergroup spacing and the role of calling among siamangs". Proceedings of the XIX Congress of the International Primatological Society (Abstract).
  20. ^ Geissmann, Thomas (1986). "Mate Change Enhances Duetting Activity in the Siamang Gibbon (Hylobates syndactylus)". Behaviour. 1 (96): 17–27. doi:10.1163/156853986x00199.
  21. ^ Geissmann, Thomas (1999). "Duet Songs of the Siamang, Hylobates Syndactylus: II. Testing the Pair-Bonding Hypothesis during a Partner Exchange". Behaviour. 8 (136): 1005–1039. doi:10.1163/156853999501694. S2CID 54736136.
  22. ^ Koda, Hiroki; Nishimura, Takeshi; Tokuda, Isao T.; Oyakawa, Chisako; Nihonmatsu, Toshikuni; Masataka, Nobuo (2012). "Soprano singing in gibbons". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 149 (3): 347–355. doi:10.1002/ajpa.22124. ISSN 0002-9483. PMID 22926979.
  23. ^ Adyn, M.F.; Sibarani, M.C.; Utoyo, L.; Surya, R.A.; Sedayu, A. (April 2022). "Role of siamang (Symphalangus syndactylus) as seed dispersal agent in a Sumatran lowland tropical forest". Biodiversitas. 23 (4): 2101–2110. doi:10.13057/biodiv/d230445. ISSN 1412-033X. S2CID 248447919.
  24. ^ a b Nursahid, R. and Bakdiantoro, H. (2005). Illegal Primate Trade in Indonesia. Profauna Indonesia. Presentation in SEAPA 1st Congress.
  25. ^ Palmer, C. E. The Extent and Causes of Illegal Logging: An Analysis of a Major Cause of Tropical Deforestation in Indonesia. CSERGE Working Paper.
  26. ^ "Illegal logging detected in 16 Kelantan forest reserves". malaymail.com. Malay Mail. 7 December 2020. Retrieved 17 January 2021.
  27. ^ Kinnaird, M.F.; Sanderson, E.W.; O'Brien, T.G.; Wibisono, H.T. & Woolmer, G. (2003). "Deforestation trends in a tropical landscape and implications for endangered mammals". Conservation Biology. 17: 245–257. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1739.2003.02040.x. S2CID 59583614.
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