2017-09-12 rlylµÄ×ÔÈ»ÊÀ½ç

½ç£º¶¯Îï½ç Animalia
ÃÅ£º¼¹Ë÷¶¯ÎïÃÅ Chordata
¸Ù£º²¸Èé¸Ù Mammalia
Ä¿£ºÁ鳤Ŀ Primates
¿Æ£ººï¿Æ Cercopithecidae
ÑǿƣºðàºïÑÇ¿Æ Colobinae
Êô£ºÑö±ÇºïÊô Rhinopithecus
ÖÖ£ºÔ½ÄϽðË¿ºï R. avunculus ( Dollman, 1912 )
·Ö²¼£ºÔ½ÄÏ

ÎïÖÖ¸ÅÊö Summary
ÖÐÎÄÃû£ºÔ½ÄϽðË¿ºï£¨Æ´Òô£ºyu¨¨ n¨¢n j¨©n s¨© h¨®u£©£»
Ó¢ÎÄÃû£ºTonkin snub-nosed monkey£»
ѧÃû£ºRhinopithecus avunculus¡£
Ô½ÄϽðË¿ºï£¬Ò²½Ð¶«¾©Ñö±Çºï£¬ÊÇΩһ·Ö²¼ÔÚÖйúÒÔÍâµØÇøµÄ½ðË¿ºï£¬½ö·Ö²¼ÓÚÔ½Äϱ±²¿Ðû¹âÊ¡ºÍ±±Ì«Ê¡Ö®¼äʯ»ÒÑÒɽµØµÄµÍº£°ÎÑÇÈÈ´øÓêÁÖÖС£ÒÔÖ²ÎïΪʳ£¬Ê³ÎïËæ¼¾½Ú¶ø±ä»¯¡£Ô½ÄϽðË¿ºï1910Äê±»·¢ÏÖ£¬Ö±µ½1989Äê²Å±»Ôٴη¢ÏÖ¡£ÏÖ´æÊýÁ¿ºÜÉÙ£¬Ô¼250Ö»¡£Ô½ÄϽðË¿ºïµÄģʽ±ê±¾²úµØÊÇÔ½Ä϶«¾©£¬ÏÖÊÕ²ØÓÚ´óÓ¢²©Îï¹Ý¡£

ÊÀ½ç×ÔÈ»±£»¤ÁªÃ˺ìÉ«Ãû¼ÁÐΪ£º¼«Î££¨CR£©
Ì峤£º51-65ÀåÃ×
ÌåÖØ£º8.5-14¹«½ï
ʳÐÔ£ºÒÔÖ²ÎïΪʳ
ϰÐÔ£ºÐ¡ÈºÌå»î¶¯
·Ö²¼£ºÔ½ÄÏ

ÍâÐÎÌØÕ÷ Description
Ô½ÄϽðË¿ºïÌ峤51-65ÀåÃ×£»Î²³¤66-92ÀåÃ×£»ÖØÁ¿8.5-14¹«½ï£¬ÐÛÐÔ½Ï´ó¡£ Ô½ÄϽðË¿ºïµÄÌåÐνÏС£¬Ðز¿¸¹²¿ÎªºÚÉ«£¬ËÄÖ«ÄÚ²àdz»ÆÉ«¡£

Éú̬ϰÐÔ Ecological Habit
Ô½ÄϽðË¿ºï·ÖСȺÌå»î¶¯£¬Í¨³£ÓÉÒ»Ö»ÐÛÐԺͶàÖ»´ÆÐÔ×é³É£¬Ò²ÓжàÖ»ÐÛÐÔµÄȺÌ壬¶à¸öСȺÌ干ͬ·ÖÏíһƬÆÜÏ¢µØ¡£Ä¿Ç°µÄÑо¿±íÃ÷£¬ÏÖ´æÔ¼ÖÁÉÙ4¸öÖÖȺ£¬×ÜÊýÔ¼250Ö»¡£Ô½ÄϽðË¿ºïÒÔÖ²ÎïΪʳ£¬Ê³ÎïËæ¼¾½Ú¶ø±ä»¯¡£
µØÀí·Ö²¼ Distribution
Ô½ÄϽðË¿ºï½ö·Ö²¼ÓÚÔ½Äϱ±²¿Ðû¹âÊ¡ºÍ±±Ì«Ê¡Ö®¼äʯ»ÒÑÒɽµØµÄµÍº£°ÎÑÇÈÈ´øÓêÁÖÖС£

Éú´æ×´¿ö Living Condition
±ôΣÒòËØ£º Ô½ÄÏÈË¿ÚÔö³¤ºÜ¿ì£¬¶ÔÓÚÔʼÉÁÖµÄÆÆ»µÊ®·ÖÑÏÖØ£¬¼«´óµÄ¼·Ñ¹ÁËÔ½ÄϽðË¿ºïµÄÉú»î¿Õ¼ä£¬ÖÁ1986Ä꣬ԽÄϽðË¿ºïÔÓÐµÄÆÜÏ¢µØÒѾɥʧ´ù¾¡¡£Ä¿Ç°Ô½ÄϽðË¿ºïÒÑ·Ö¸î³ÉÁ½¸öÖÖȺ¡£´ËÍ⣬¹ý¶È²¶ÁÔÓÃÓÚÆ¤Ã«ºÍ¶«·½Ò©ÎïҲʹËüÃÇ´¦ÓÚ¸üΣ¼±µÄµØÎ»¡£ ±£»¤´ëÊ©£º ËäÈ»1985ÄêÔ½ÄϵĹú¼Ò±£»¤²ßÂÔ¿ªÊ¼ÊµÊ©£¬µ«Ö´ÐÐÇé¿öÒ»Ö±²»ºÃ¡£ÏÖÔڵı£»¤´ëÊ©Êǹ滮±£»¤ÇøºÍ½ûÖ¹²¶ÁÔ£¬µ«Õâ¸öÎïÖÖÃæÁÙµÄÇé¿öÒÀ¾ÉºÜ²»ÀÖ¹Û£¬Na Hang±£»¤Çø¼´Ê¹½¨Á¢£¬Ô½ÄϽðË¿ºïÔÚδÀ´20ÄêÀïÃð¾øµÄ»úÂÊÒÀ¾ÉºÜ¸ß¡£

֪ ʶ Knowledge
Ô½ÄϽðË¿ºïѧÃû£ºRhinopithecus avunculus£¬ÓÉÓ¢¹ú¶¯Îïѧ¼Ò--¸ÇÒÁ€€¶Å¶ûÂü£¨Guy Dollman£©ÓÚ1912ÄêÃüÃû¡£
Ô½ÄϽðË¿ºïµÄÓ¢ÎĽéÉÜ Introduction
The Tonkin snub-nosed monkey or Dollman's snub-nosed monkey (Rhinopithecus avunculus) is a critically endangered, slender-bodied arboreal colobine, endemic to northern Vietnam. Recorded at elevations between 200 to 1,200 m, its distribution is currently restricted to small fragmented tropical evergreen forests associated with steep karst limestone hills and mountains. Five isolated extant populations have been identified since its rediscovery in 1992. Despite heralded as a flagship species and subsequently receiving international attention and conservation actions, the population trend remains on the decline; therefore causing it to be continuously listed as one of "The World's 25 Most Endangered Primates." since the first global non-human primate biennial assessment began in 2001.
ÔÚÉñÃØµÄ´ó×ÔÈ»ÃæÇ°£¬ÎÒÃÇÎÞÖªµÄÏñ¸öº¢×Ó......

2019-03-21 11:40

2019-03-21 11:40

2019-03-21 11:40

2019-03-20 17:47

2019-03-20 17:47

2019-03-19 22:18

2019-03-19 22:18

2019-03-19 22:18

2019-03-19 22:18

2019-03-18 22:17