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Sunda slow loris

The Sunda slow loris (Nycticebus coucang) or greater slow loris is a strepsirrhine primate and a species of slow loris native to Indonesia, West Malaysia, southern Thailand and Singapore. It measures 27 to 38 cm (11 to 15 in) from head to tail and weighs between 599 and 685 g (21.1 and 24.2 oz). Like other slow lorises, it has a wet nose (rhinarium), a round head, small ears hidden in thick fur, a flat face, large eyes and a vestigial tail.

Sunda slow loris[1]
CITES Appendix I (CITES)[3]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Primates
Suborder: Strepsirrhini
Family: Lorisidae
Genus: Nycticebus
Species:
N. coucang
Binomial name
Nycticebus coucang
(Boddaert, 1785)
Sunda slow loris range
Synonyms[1][6][7]
  • Bradylemur tardigradus var. B. (Lesson, 1840)
  • Kra Buku (Raffles 1821)
  • Lemur tardigradus Raffles, 1821: (Not Linnaeus, 1758)
  • N. coucang brachycephalus Sody, 1949
  • N. c. buku Robinson, 1917[Note 1]
  • N. c. hilleri Stone and Rehn, 1902
  • N. c. insularis Robinson, 1917
  • N. c. natunae Stone and Rehn, 1902
  • N. Sumatrensis Ludeking, 1867: (nomen nudum)
  • N. tardigradus var malaiana Anderson, 1881
  • N. t. malayanus (Lydekker, 1904)
  • Tardigradus coucang Boddaert, 1785: (no locality)

The Sunda slow loris is nocturnal and arboreal, typically occurring in evergreen forests. It prefers rainforests with continuous dense canopies and has an extremely low metabolic rate compared to other mammals of its size. Its diet consists of sap, floral nectar, fruit and arthropods, and will feed on exudates such as gum and sap by licking wounds in trees. Individuals are generally solitary, with one study showing only 8% of its active time was spent near other individuals. It has a monogamous mating system with the offspring living with the parents. It sleeps during the day, rolled up in a ball in hidden parts of trees above the ground, often on branches, twigs, palm fronds, or lianas. The species is polyoestrous, usually giving birth to a single offspring after a gestation period of 192 days. The young disperses between 16 and 27 months, generally when it is sexually mature.

The species is listed as endangered on the IUCN Red List. It is threatened with extinction due to a growing demand in the exotic pet trade, and has become one of the most abundant primate species on sale at Indonesian pet markets. Its teeth are often pulled out before being sold as pets which can result in infection and/or death, this process makes reintroduction to the wild impossible. It also suffers from habitat loss, which has been severe in the areas in which it is found.

Etymology edit

The common name, Sunda slow loris, refers to the Sunda Islands, a group of islands in the western part of the Malay archipelago where it is found.[8] Another common name for the species is the greater slow loris.[9] The specific name, coucang, derives from kukang, its common name in Indonesia.[8] It is commonly known as malu-malu, meaning "shy" in Indonesian, and also as bukang or Kalamasan.[8][10] It is sometimes called kuskus, because local people do not distinguish between the slow loris and cuscus, a group of Australasian possums.[10] In Malaysia they are sometimes known as kongkang or kera duku; kera is Malay for monkey while duku is the fruit-bearing tree, Lansium parasiticum.[10] In Thailand, it is called ling lom (ลิงลม), which translates as "wind monkey".[10]

Taxonomy and phylogeny edit

The Sunda slow loris was first described (in part) in 1785 by the Dutch physician and naturalist Pieter Boddaert under the name Tardigradus coucang.[11][12] However, its discovery dates to 1770, when the Dutchman Arnout Vosmaer (1720–1799) described a specimen of it as a type of sloth. Vosmaer gave it the French name "le paresseux pentadactyle du Bengale" ("the five-fingered sloth of Bengal"), but Boddaert later argued that it was more closely aligned with the lorises of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) and Bengal.[13]

Between 1800 and 1907, several other slow loris species were described, but in 1953 the primatologist William Charles Osman Hill, in his influential book, Primates: Comparative Anatomy and Taxonomy, consolidated all the slow lorises into a single species, N. coucang.[14] In 1971 Colin Groves recognized the pygmy slow loris (N. pygmaeus) as a separate species,[15] and divided N. coucang into four subspecies.[16] In 2001 Groves opined that there were three species (N. coucang, N. pygmaeus, and N. bengalensis), and that N. coucang itself had three subspecies (Nycticebus coucang coucang, N. c. menagensis, and N. c. javanicus).[17] These three subspecies were promoted in 2010 to species status—the Sunda slow loris, the Javan slow loris (N. javanicus) and Bornean slow loris (N. menagensis).[18] Species differentiation was based largely on differences in morphology, such as size, fur color, and head markings.[19] (At the end of 2012, the Bornean slow loris was itself divided into four distinct species.)[20]: 46 

When Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire defined the genus Nycticebus in 1812, he made the Sunda slow loris the type species.[21] This was questioned in 1921 by British zoologist Oldfield Thomas, who noted that there was some confusion over which specimen was used as the type specimen. Instead, he suggested that the type specimen was actually the Bengal slow loris, Lori bengalensis Lacépède, 1800.[11][22][23] There was further confusion during the 1800s when Boddaert's Tardigradus coucang was routinely mistaken for Carl Linnaeus' Lemur tardigradus – a species he had described in the 10th edition of Systema Naturæ (1758) The fact that Lemur tardigradus was actually a slender loris remained obscured until 1902, when mammalogists Witmer Stone and James A. G. Rehn finally cleared the air.[24]

The species has 50 chromosomes (2n=50), and it genome size is 3.58 pg.[25] Of its chromosomes, 22 are metacentric, 26 are submetacentric, and none are acrocentric. Its X chromosome is submetacentric, and its Y chromosome is metacentric.[26]

To help clarify species and subspecies boundaries, and to establish whether morphology-based classifications were consistent with evolutionary relationships, the phylogenetic relationships within the genus Nycticebus have been investigated using DNA sequences derived from the mitochondrial markers D-loop and cytochrome b. Although most of the recognized lineages of Nycticebus (including the pygmy slow loris (N. pygmaeus), Bornean slow loris (N. menagensis) and the Javan slow loris (N. javanicus)) were shown to be genetically distinct, the analysis suggested that DNA sequences from selected individuals of Sunda slow loris (N. coucang) and Bengal slow loris (N. bengalensis) shared a closer evolutionary relationship with each other than with other members of their own respective species. The authors suggest that this result may be explained by introgressive hybridization, as the tested individuals of these two taxa originated from a region of sympatry in southern Thailand; the precise origin of one of the N. coucang individuals was not known.[27] This hypothesis was corroborated by a 2007 study that compared the variations in mitochondrial DNA sequences between N. bengalensis and N. coucang, and suggested that there has indeed been gene flow between the two species.[28]

Anatomy and physiology edit

 
Skeleton

The Sunda slow loris has dark rings around its large eyes,[29] a white nose with a whitish strip that extends to the forehead and a dark stripe that stretches from the back of the head along the spine.[30][31] Its soft, thick, woolly fur ranges from light brown to deep reddish brown, with a lighter underside.[8][31] The species is distinct from the Bengal slow loris due to the dark inverse teardrop markings around the eyes which meet the dark dorsal stripe on the back of the head.[32] It tends to have a much more distinct white stripe between the eyes, more distinct dark coloring around the eyes, and a browner coat than the Bengal slow loris which is larger, grayer, and shows less contrast.[32] The Sunda slow loris has less white facial coloring than the much smaller pygmy slow loris.[32] Local color variations are known to occur.[8]

 
The Sunda slow loris generally holds branches with at least three limbs at one time.

It measures between 27 and 38 centimetres (11 and 15 in) and weighs 599 and 685 grams (21.1 and 24.2 oz).[33][34][35][36] Unlike the Bengal slow loris, the Sunda slow loris does not show sexual dimorphism by weight.[35] The vestigial tail,[37] hidden beneath the fur, is reduced to a stump.[36] It has a toothcomb, six forward-facing teeth on the bottom jaw, which includes the lower incisors and the canine teeth. The structure is generally used for grooming in other strepsirhine primates, but lorises also use it to scrape off gum when foraging.[38] It has a shortened second digit, and the hands have a strong grip.[36] Like other lorises, it excretes a strong-smelling liquid from glands beneath its arms which is used in communication.[39]

One major distinguishing feature between all loris species is locomotion: the Sunda slow loris moves slowly through trees on all four limbs, typically with three limbs attached to a support at a time.[33][40] Its movement has been described as unique; similar to crawling, or as if it was climbing in every direction, the Sunda slow loris changes direction or moves between branches with little noise or change in speed.[41] In captivity, about a quarter of its time is spent moving quadrupedally, a quarter suspended or hanging, a quarter climbing, and a quarter clasping multiple branches (bridging).[42] It may hang below a branch by one or both feet for long periods of time.[43]

Behavior and ecology edit

Like other slow lorises, the Sunda slow loris is an arboreal and nocturnal primate, resting by day in the forks of trees, or in thick vegetation and feeding on fruit and insects by night. Unlike other loris species, it remains in trees most of its life: while the Bengal slow loris will often sleep on the ground, the Sunda slow loris sleeps in a ball in branches or foliage.[30] It usually sleeps alone but has been observed to sleep with several conspecifics (individuals of the same species), including other adults.[40] Adults live in overlapping ranges of 0.004 to 0.25 km2 (0.0015 to 0.0965 sq mi).[40][44]

Despite its slow metabolism rate, the Sunda slow loris has a high-energy diet. Its slow lifestyle may be due to the energy costs of detoxifying certain secondary plant compounds in many genera of food plants their diets. The largest amount of time is spent eating phloem sap (34.9%), floral nectar and nectar-producing plant parts (31.7%), and fruits (22.5%). It also consumes gums and arthropods such as spiders and insects.[40] Gum is taken by licking wounds on trees.[45] They are also known to feed on molluscs, including the giant land snail Achatina fulica,[46] and birds' eggs.[47]

All slow loris species produce a toxin in glands on the insides of their elbows. This is spread across their bodies and those of their offspring using the toothcomb while grooming.[48] When threatened with predators, the Sunda slow loris can bite, roll into a ball exposing its toxic saliva-covered fur, or roll up and drop from the trees.[49] However, the primary method of predator avoidance is crypsis, whereby it hides.[44][50] The Asiatic reticulated python, the changeable hawk-eagle and the Sumatran orangutan have been recorded as predators of the Sunda slow loris.[39][50][51]

Social systems edit

The Sunda slow loris may fit into the monogamous single male/single female social system,[44][52] though are mainly known to be solitary.[40] One study showed only 8% of the species' active time was spent near other individuals.[30] Where home ranges overlap, spatial groups are formed. These groups consist of one male, one female and up to three younger individuals.[40] The interactions between these individuals are largely friendly; they include allogrooming, following, pant-growling, and click-calling, although social behaviors only make up around 3% of the activity budget.[44] When it comes into contact with conspecifics from other home ranges there is usually no reaction as home ranges are not defended.[44] In captivity however, it can be aggressive with other individuals. Males have shown antagonistic behaviors such as attacks, pursuits, threats, assertion, fighting, and subordination.[43] The fighting often results in serious injury.[43] Despite this, they are known to be generally sociable in captivity,[43] with allogrooming being the most common social behavior.[53]

Communication edit

There are eight distinct call types made by Sunda slow loris adults, which can be divided into two categories:[54] contact and contact-seeking calls such as whistles and short keckers (a social play and attention-seeking call), and aggressive and defensive calls such as long keckers, screams, snarls and grunts.[54] Because they rely on crypsis to avoid predators, they do not make alarm calls.[44] Infants emit clicks and squeaks when disturbed.[55] During estrus, females make whistle calls when in visual contact with a male.[54][55] When exploring new environments and during handling, it makes ultrasonic vocalisations out of the human hearing range.[54]

Olfactory communication is very important in this species. It has roles in alerting others of the identity, physical state and position of the individual.[39][49][56] It is also important in reproduction.[30] Like other slow lorises, the Sunda slow loris has glands on its elbows that exude oils. The gland is licked to spread scent and is thought to have evolved for communication, but it is toxic to humans. If the person is allergic to the animal they can go into shock and could even die.[39][57] It also has glands on its anus and can signal conspecifics by perineal rubbing which deposits urine.[39][49][56] When it locates the scent of another slow loris it may rub its face on the substrate where the scent was found.[56] The Sunda slow loris may grin or bare its teeth. When stressed, infants may grin, while adults bear their teeth to show aggression or fear, but also during play.[56]

Reproduction edit

 
Females hang from branches during copulation.

Reproduction is one of the few times the Sunda slow loris aggregates with conspecifics, as it is largely solitary. One study recorded that the most slow lorises ever seen together was six; this appeared to be a female in estrus and five males following her.[46] This may suggest a more promiscuous mating system, where females mate with more than one male.[40] Despite this, its testis size is small compared with similar sized promsimians, which is indicative of monogamy.[40] In the wild the mating system of the Sunda slow loris is thought to vary between populations.[44]

Sexual maturity is reached between the ages of 18 and 24 months in females, and can be reached by 17 months in males.[58] It is polyestrous, having many periods of sexual receptivity during a year.[59] In captivity however, there is a clear birth peak between March and May.[58] It has been observed that reproductive patterns of captive prosimians in the northern hemisphere are altered.[59] The estrus cycle lasts 29–45 days, with most copulations occurring on the same day.[58]

Females in estrus are followed by males, with copulation initiated by the female.[59] The female will hang from a branch and may vocalise. The male will hold the female and the branch and copulate with her.[59][60] Urine-marking and vocalising are also used by the female to solicit mating.[60] The male may create a mating plug following copulation.[58]

The gestation period averages 192.2 days, after which one young is born, although twinning has been observed.[58] Both males and females will disperse in the wild, this occurs between 16 and 27 months.[44]

Distribution and habitat edit

The Sunda slow loris is found in continuous canopy tropical rainforests.[52][61] It is adaptable and will also live in other types of habitat.[30] It is found in Indonesia, on the islands of Sumatra, Batam and Galang in the Riau Archipelago, and Tebing Tinggi Island and Great Natuna (Bunguran) in the Natuna Islands; in Malaysia on the Malay Peninsula and Pulau Tioman; in the southern peninsular of Thailand; and Singapore.[8][30][31][35][62]

Despite being presumed extinct in Pulau Tioman, records indicate that slow lorises may still inhabit the island. The facial markings and morphology of the Tioman slow loris are substantially different from mainland individuals, which hints at the potential distinctiveness of the population.[63]

The Sunda slow loris is sympatric (shares its range) with the Bengal slow loris in Thailand and hybridisation has occurred.[28]

Conservation edit

According to the 2020 International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List assessment, the Sunda slow loris was evaluated as endangered.[9] In June 2007 it was transferred from CITES Appendix II to Appendix I, indicating a true concern about the state of international trade in this species, an act now forbidden by international law.[64] It is also protected by Indonesian law, though the law does not seem to be strictly enforced.[65] Its population size is unknown and further studies need to be carried out to confirm their conservation status.[9]

 
Removing or clipping slow loris teeth can lead to infection and death.

The Sunda slow loris is greatly threatened by the pet trade, and is sold as an exotic pet throughout southeast Asia.[52][66] The slow lorises are the most commonly traded protected primates in southeast Asia.[32][66] When sold as a pet it often will have its teeth pulled out to prevent injury to the owner.[8] This may cause dental infections which have up to a 90% death rate.[64] Once it has lost its teeth, reintroduction to the wild is impossible.[9] Due to a very high mortality rate in captivity due to stress, improper nutrition and infection, the pet trade is inflated by replacements.[8][64] With a greater purchasing power, the increasing human populations in the species' range could have an even more serious impact.[8]

The Sunda slow loris is further threatened by gathering for illegal traditional medicine. The fur is reported to heal wounds, the flesh to cure epilepsy, eyes are used in love potions, and the meat is reported to cure asthma and stomach problems.[8] It is also killed as a crop pest.[9] Severe habitat loss and degradation over large areas of its range have caused large population declines,[8] even though the species is more adaptable to anthropogenic habitats than other primates in the region. The resulting fragmentation has restricted species dispersal as it depends on continuous canopy cover to move from tree to tree.[9]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ In 1917, Robinson used the name buku, attributed to Ruffles 1821;[4] however, the name buku as originally applied did not refer to a loris.[5]

References edit

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sunda, slow, loris, nycticebus, coucang, greater, slow, loris, strepsirrhine, primate, species, slow, loris, native, indonesia, west, malaysia, southern, thailand, singapore, measures, from, head, tail, weighs, between, like, other, slow, lorises, nose, rhinar. The Sunda slow loris Nycticebus coucang or greater slow loris is a strepsirrhine primate and a species of slow loris native to Indonesia West Malaysia southern Thailand and Singapore It measures 27 to 38 cm 11 to 15 in from head to tail and weighs between 599 and 685 g 21 1 and 24 2 oz Like other slow lorises it has a wet nose rhinarium a round head small ears hidden in thick fur a flat face large eyes and a vestigial tail Sunda slow loris 1 Conservation statusEndangered IUCN 3 1 2 CITES Appendix I CITES 3 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder PrimatesSuborder StrepsirrhiniFamily LorisidaeGenus NycticebusSpecies N coucangBinomial nameNycticebus coucang Boddaert 1785 Sunda slow loris rangeSynonyms 1 6 7 Bradylemur tardigradus var B Lesson 1840 Kra Buku Raffles 1821 Lemur tardigradus Raffles 1821 Not Linnaeus 1758 N coucang brachycephalus Sody 1949 N c buku Robinson 1917 Note 1 N c hilleri Stone and Rehn 1902 N c insularis Robinson 1917 N c natunae Stone and Rehn 1902 N Sumatrensis Ludeking 1867 nomen nudum N tardigradus var malaiana Anderson 1881 N t malayanus Lydekker 1904 Tardigradus coucang Boddaert 1785 no locality The Sunda slow loris is nocturnal and arboreal typically occurring in evergreen forests It prefers rainforests with continuous dense canopies and has an extremely low metabolic rate compared to other mammals of its size Its diet consists of sap floral nectar fruit and arthropods and will feed on exudates such as gum and sap by licking wounds in trees Individuals are generally solitary with one study showing only 8 of its active time was spent near other individuals It has a monogamous mating system with the offspring living with the parents It sleeps during the day rolled up in a ball in hidden parts of trees above the ground often on branches twigs palm fronds or lianas The species is polyoestrous usually giving birth to a single offspring after a gestation period of 192 days The young disperses between 16 and 27 months generally when it is sexually mature The species is listed as endangered on the IUCN Red List It is threatened with extinction due to a growing demand in the exotic pet trade and has become one of the most abundant primate species on sale at Indonesian pet markets Its teeth are often pulled out before being sold as pets which can result in infection and or death this process makes reintroduction to the wild impossible It also suffers from habitat loss which has been severe in the areas in which it is found Contents 1 Etymology 2 Taxonomy and phylogeny 3 Anatomy and physiology 4 Behavior and ecology 4 1 Social systems 4 2 Communication 4 3 Reproduction 5 Distribution and habitat 6 Conservation 7 Footnotes 8 References 8 1 Literature citedEtymology editThe common name Sunda slow loris refers to the Sunda Islands a group of islands in the western part of the Malay archipelago where it is found 8 Another common name for the species is the greater slow loris 9 The specific name coucang derives from kukang its common name in Indonesia 8 It is commonly known as malu malu meaning shy in Indonesian and also as bukang or Kalamasan 8 10 It is sometimes called kuskus because local people do not distinguish between the slow loris and cuscus a group of Australasian possums 10 In Malaysia they are sometimes known as kongkang or kera duku kera is Malay for monkey while duku is the fruit bearing tree Lansium parasiticum 10 In Thailand it is called ling lom linglm which translates as wind monkey 10 Taxonomy and phylogeny editThe Sunda slow loris was first described in part in 1785 by the Dutch physician and naturalist Pieter Boddaert under the name Tardigradus coucang 11 12 However its discovery dates to 1770 when the Dutchman Arnout Vosmaer 1720 1799 described a specimen of it as a type of sloth Vosmaer gave it the French name le paresseux pentadactyle du Bengale the five fingered sloth of Bengal but Boddaert later argued that it was more closely aligned with the lorises of Ceylon now Sri Lanka and Bengal 13 Between 1800 and 1907 several other slow loris species were described but in 1953 the primatologist William Charles Osman Hill in his influential book Primates Comparative Anatomy and Taxonomy consolidated all the slow lorises into a single species N coucang 14 In 1971 Colin Groves recognized the pygmy slow loris N pygmaeus as a separate species 15 and divided N coucang into four subspecies 16 In 2001 Groves opined that there were three species N coucang N pygmaeus and N bengalensis and that N coucang itself had three subspecies Nycticebus coucang coucang N c menagensis and N c javanicus 17 These three subspecies were promoted in 2010 to species status the Sunda slow loris the Javan slow loris N javanicus and Bornean slow loris N menagensis 18 Species differentiation was based largely on differences in morphology such as size fur color and head markings 19 At the end of 2012 the Bornean slow loris was itself divided into four distinct species 20 46 When Etienne Geoffroy Saint Hilaire defined the genus Nycticebus in 1812 he made the Sunda slow loris the type species 21 This was questioned in 1921 by British zoologist Oldfield Thomas who noted that there was some confusion over which specimen was used as the type specimen Instead he suggested that the type specimen was actually the Bengal slow loris Lori bengalensis Lacepede 1800 11 22 23 There was further confusion during the 1800s when Boddaert s Tardigradus coucang was routinely mistaken for Carl Linnaeus Lemur tardigradus a species he had described in the 10th edition of Systema Naturae 1758 The fact that Lemur tardigradus was actually a slender loris remained obscured until 1902 when mammalogists Witmer Stone and James A G Rehn finally cleared the air 24 The species has 50 chromosomes 2n 50 and it genome size is 3 58 pg 25 Of its chromosomes 22 are metacentric 26 are submetacentric and none are acrocentric Its X chromosome is submetacentric and its Y chromosome is metacentric 26 To help clarify species and subspecies boundaries and to establish whether morphology based classifications were consistent with evolutionary relationships the phylogenetic relationships within the genus Nycticebus have been investigated using DNA sequences derived from the mitochondrial markers D loop and cytochrome b Although most of the recognized lineages of Nycticebus including the pygmy slow loris N pygmaeus Bornean slow loris N menagensis and the Javan slow loris N javanicus were shown to be genetically distinct the analysis suggested that DNA sequences from selected individuals of Sunda slow loris N coucang and Bengal slow loris N bengalensis shared a closer evolutionary relationship with each other than with other members of their own respective species The authors suggest that this result may be explained by introgressive hybridization as the tested individuals of these two taxa originated from a region of sympatry in southern Thailand the precise origin of one of the N coucang individuals was not known 27 This hypothesis was corroborated by a 2007 study that compared the variations in mitochondrial DNA sequences between N bengalensis and N coucang and suggested that there has indeed been gene flow between the two species 28 Anatomy and physiology edit nbsp SkeletonThe Sunda slow loris has dark rings around its large eyes 29 a white nose with a whitish strip that extends to the forehead and a dark stripe that stretches from the back of the head along the spine 30 31 Its soft thick woolly fur ranges from light brown to deep reddish brown with a lighter underside 8 31 The species is distinct from the Bengal slow loris due to the dark inverse teardrop markings around the eyes which meet the dark dorsal stripe on the back of the head 32 It tends to have a much more distinct white stripe between the eyes more distinct dark coloring around the eyes and a browner coat than the Bengal slow loris which is larger grayer and shows less contrast 32 The Sunda slow loris has less white facial coloring than the much smaller pygmy slow loris 32 Local color variations are known to occur 8 nbsp The Sunda slow loris generally holds branches with at least three limbs at one time It measures between 27 and 38 centimetres 11 and 15 in and weighs 599 and 685 grams 21 1 and 24 2 oz 33 34 35 36 Unlike the Bengal slow loris the Sunda slow loris does not show sexual dimorphism by weight 35 The vestigial tail 37 hidden beneath the fur is reduced to a stump 36 It has a toothcomb six forward facing teeth on the bottom jaw which includes the lower incisors and the canine teeth The structure is generally used for grooming in other strepsirhine primates but lorises also use it to scrape off gum when foraging 38 It has a shortened second digit and the hands have a strong grip 36 Like other lorises it excretes a strong smelling liquid from glands beneath its arms which is used in communication 39 One major distinguishing feature between all loris species is locomotion the Sunda slow loris moves slowly through trees on all four limbs typically with three limbs attached to a support at a time 33 40 Its movement has been described as unique similar to crawling or as if it was climbing in every direction the Sunda slow loris changes direction or moves between branches with little noise or change in speed 41 In captivity about a quarter of its time is spent moving quadrupedally a quarter suspended or hanging a quarter climbing and a quarter clasping multiple branches bridging 42 It may hang below a branch by one or both feet for long periods of time 43 Behavior and ecology editLike other slow lorises the Sunda slow loris is an arboreal and nocturnal primate resting by day in the forks of trees or in thick vegetation and feeding on fruit and insects by night Unlike other loris species it remains in trees most of its life while the Bengal slow loris will often sleep on the ground the Sunda slow loris sleeps in a ball in branches or foliage 30 It usually sleeps alone but has been observed to sleep with several conspecifics individuals of the same species including other adults 40 Adults live in overlapping ranges of 0 004 to 0 25 km2 0 0015 to 0 0965 sq mi 40 44 Despite its slow metabolism rate the Sunda slow loris has a high energy diet Its slow lifestyle may be due to the energy costs of detoxifying certain secondary plant compounds in many genera of food plants their diets The largest amount of time is spent eating phloem sap 34 9 floral nectar and nectar producing plant parts 31 7 and fruits 22 5 It also consumes gums and arthropods such as spiders and insects 40 Gum is taken by licking wounds on trees 45 They are also known to feed on molluscs including the giant land snail Achatina fulica 46 and birds eggs 47 All slow loris species produce a toxin in glands on the insides of their elbows This is spread across their bodies and those of their offspring using the toothcomb while grooming 48 When threatened with predators the Sunda slow loris can bite roll into a ball exposing its toxic saliva covered fur or roll up and drop from the trees 49 However the primary method of predator avoidance is crypsis whereby it hides 44 50 The Asiatic reticulated python the changeable hawk eagle and the Sumatran orangutan have been recorded as predators of the Sunda slow loris 39 50 51 Social systems edit The Sunda slow loris may fit into the monogamous single male single female social system 44 52 though are mainly known to be solitary 40 One study showed only 8 of the species active time was spent near other individuals 30 Where home ranges overlap spatial groups are formed These groups consist of one male one female and up to three younger individuals 40 The interactions between these individuals are largely friendly they include allogrooming following pant growling and click calling although social behaviors only make up around 3 of the activity budget 44 When it comes into contact with conspecifics from other home ranges there is usually no reaction as home ranges are not defended 44 In captivity however it can be aggressive with other individuals Males have shown antagonistic behaviors such as attacks pursuits threats assertion fighting and subordination 43 The fighting often results in serious injury 43 Despite this they are known to be generally sociable in captivity 43 with allogrooming being the most common social behavior 53 Communication edit There are eight distinct call types made by Sunda slow loris adults which can be divided into two categories 54 contact and contact seeking calls such as whistles and short keckers a social play and attention seeking call and aggressive and defensive calls such as long keckers screams snarls and grunts 54 Because they rely on crypsis to avoid predators they do not make alarm calls 44 Infants emit clicks and squeaks when disturbed 55 During estrus females make whistle calls when in visual contact with a male 54 55 When exploring new environments and during handling it makes ultrasonic vocalisations out of the human hearing range 54 Olfactory communication is very important in this species It has roles in alerting others of the identity physical state and position of the individual 39 49 56 It is also important in reproduction 30 Like other slow lorises the Sunda slow loris has glands on its elbows that exude oils The gland is licked to spread scent and is thought to have evolved for communication but it is toxic to humans If the person is allergic to the animal they can go into shock and could even die 39 57 It also has glands on its anus and can signal conspecifics by perineal rubbing which deposits urine 39 49 56 When it locates the scent of another slow loris it may rub its face on the substrate where the scent was found 56 The Sunda slow loris may grin or bare its teeth When stressed infants may grin while adults bear their teeth to show aggression or fear but also during play 56 Reproduction edit nbsp Females hang from branches during copulation Reproduction is one of the few times the Sunda slow loris aggregates with conspecifics as it is largely solitary One study recorded that the most slow lorises ever seen together was six this appeared to be a female in estrus and five males following her 46 This may suggest a more promiscuous mating system where females mate with more than one male 40 Despite this its testis size is small compared with similar sized promsimians which is indicative of monogamy 40 In the wild the mating system of the Sunda slow loris is thought to vary between populations 44 Sexual maturity is reached between the ages of 18 and 24 months in females and can be reached by 17 months in males 58 It is polyestrous having many periods of sexual receptivity during a year 59 In captivity however there is a clear birth peak between March and May 58 It has been observed that reproductive patterns of captive prosimians in the northern hemisphere are altered 59 The estrus cycle lasts 29 45 days with most copulations occurring on the same day 58 Females in estrus are followed by males with copulation initiated by the female 59 The female will hang from a branch and may vocalise The male will hold the female and the branch and copulate with her 59 60 Urine marking and vocalising are also used by the female to solicit mating 60 The male may create a mating plug following copulation 58 The gestation period averages 192 2 days after which one young is born although twinning has been observed 58 Both males and females will disperse in the wild this occurs between 16 and 27 months 44 Distribution and habitat editThe Sunda slow loris is found in continuous canopy tropical rainforests 52 61 It is adaptable and will also live in other types of habitat 30 It is found in Indonesia on the islands of Sumatra Batam and Galang in the Riau Archipelago and Tebing Tinggi Island and Great Natuna Bunguran in the Natuna Islands in Malaysia on the Malay Peninsula and Pulau Tioman in the southern peninsular of Thailand and Singapore 8 30 31 35 62 Despite being presumed extinct in Pulau Tioman records indicate that slow lorises may still inhabit the island The facial markings and morphology of the Tioman slow loris are substantially different from mainland individuals which hints at the potential distinctiveness of the population 63 The Sunda slow loris is sympatric shares its range with the Bengal slow loris in Thailand and hybridisation has occurred 28 Conservation editSee also Conservation of slow lorises According to the 2020 International Union for Conservation of Nature IUCN Red List assessment the Sunda slow loris was evaluated as endangered 9 In June 2007 it was transferred from CITES Appendix II to Appendix I indicating a true concern about the state of international trade in this species an act now forbidden by international law 64 It is also protected by Indonesian law though the law does not seem to be strictly enforced 65 Its population size is unknown and further studies need to be carried out to confirm their conservation status 9 nbsp Removing or clipping slow loris teeth can lead to infection and death The Sunda slow loris is greatly threatened by the pet trade and is sold as an exotic pet throughout southeast Asia 52 66 The slow lorises are the most commonly traded protected primates in southeast Asia 32 66 When sold as a pet it often will have its teeth pulled out to prevent injury to the owner 8 This may cause dental infections which have up to a 90 death rate 64 Once it has lost its teeth reintroduction to the wild is impossible 9 Due to a very high mortality rate in captivity due to stress improper nutrition and infection the pet trade is inflated by replacements 8 64 With a greater purchasing power the increasing human populations in the species range could have an even more serious impact 8 The Sunda slow loris is further threatened by gathering for illegal traditional medicine The fur is reported to heal wounds the flesh to cure epilepsy eyes are used in love potions and the meat is reported to cure asthma and stomach problems 8 It is also killed as a crop pest 9 Severe habitat loss and degradation over large areas of its range have caused large population declines 8 even though the species is more adaptable to anthropogenic habitats than other primates in the region The resulting fragmentation has restricted species dispersal as it depends on continuous canopy cover to move from tree to tree 9 Footnotes edit In 1917 Robinson used the name buku attributed to Ruffles 1821 4 however the name buku as originally applied did not refer to a loris 5 References edit a b Groves 2005 p 122 Nekaris K A I Poindexter S amp Streicher U 2020 Nycticebus coucang IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T163017685A17970966 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 2 RLTS T163017685A17970966 en Retrieved 10 July 2020 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors 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Indonesia s Slow Lorises Suffer in Trade PDF IPPL News International Primate Protection League 35 2 10 ISSN 1040 3027 Retrieved 13 February 2011 Nekaris K A I Jaffe S 2007 Unexpected diversity of slow lorises Nycticebus spp within the Javan pet trade implications for slow loris taxonomy Contributions to Zoology 76 3 187 196 doi 10 1163 18759866 07603004 S2CID 45718454 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 05 22 Retrieved 2011 02 13 a b Nekaris K A I Nijman V 2007 CITES Proposal Highlights Rarity of Asian Nocturnal Primates Lorisidae Nycticebus PDF Folia Primatologica 78 4 211 214 doi 10 1159 000102316 PMID 17495478 S2CID 1407149 Archived PDF from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 29 August 2015 Literature cited edit Alterman L 1995 Toxins and toothcombs Potential allospecific chemical defenses in Nycticebus and Perodicticus In Alterman L Doyle G A Izard M K eds Creatures of the Dark The Nocturnal Prosimians New York Plenum Press ISBN 978 0 306 45183 6 OCLC 33441731 Ankel Simons F 2007 Primate anatomy an introduction Third ed San Diego Elsevier ISBN 978 0 12 058670 7 OCLC 42622248 Chasen F N 1940 A handlist of Malaysian mammals PDF Bulletin of the Raffles Museum 15 1 209 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 06 06 Retrieved 2011 03 02 Elliot Daniel Giraud 1913 A Review of the Primates Monograph series no 1 Vol 1 New York New York American Museum of Natural History OCLC 1282520 Fooden Jack 1971 Report on primates collected in western Thailand January April 1967 Fieldiana Zoology Chicago Field Museum of Natural History 59 1 1 62 ISSN 0015 0754 Groves C P 1971 Systematics of the genus Nycticebus Proceedings of the 3rd International Congress of Primatology Zurich 1970 Vol 1 Basel Karger pp 44 53 Groves C P 2001 Primate Taxonomy Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN 978 1 56098 872 4 OCLC 44868886 Groves C P 2005 Nycticebus coucang In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press pp 111 184 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 Hagey L R Fry B G Fitch Snyder H 2007 Talking defensively a dual use for the brachial gland exudate of slow and pygmy lorises In Gursky S L Nekaris K A I eds Primate Anti Predator Strategies Developments in Primatology Progress and Prospects Springer doi 10 1007 978 0 387 34810 0 ISBN 978 0 387 34807 0 Ishida H Jouffroy F K Nakano Y 1986 Comparative dynamics of pronograde and upside down horizontal quadrupedalism in the slow loris Nycticebus coucang In Jouffroy F K Stack M H Niemitz C eds Gravity posture and locomotion in primates Florence Italy Il Sedicesimo ISBN 978 88 85342 01 9 OCLC 27036881 Martin R D 1979 Phylogenetic aspects of prosimian behavior In Doyle G A Martin R D eds The Study of Prosimian Behavior New York Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 222150 7 OCLC 3912930 Nekaris A Bearder S K 2007 The Lorisiform primates of Asia and mainland Africa In Campbell C J Fuentes A MacKinnon K C Panger M Bearder S K eds Primates in perspective New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 517133 4 OCLC 60664435 Nowak R 1991 Walker s Mammals of the World Vol 1 5th ed Maryland Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 3970 2 OCLC 24141759 Osman Hill W C 1953a Primates Comparative Anatomy and Taxonomy I Strepsirhini Edinburgh Univ Pubs Science amp Maths No 3 Edinburgh University Press OCLC 500576914 Osman Hill W C 1953b Early records of the slender loris and its allies Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 123 1 43 47 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 1953 tb00153 x Roonwal M Mohnot S 1977 Slow loris Primates of South Asia ecology sociobiology and behavior Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 70485 5 OCLC 2388247 Rowe N 1996 A pictorial guide to the living primates New York Pogonias Press ISBN 978 0 9648825 1 5 OCLC 35692646 Saint Hilaire Etienne Geoffroy 1812 Suite au Tableau des Quadrummanes Seconde Famille Lemuriens Strepsirrhini Annales du Museum National d Histoire Naturelle in French 19 156 170 Schulze H Groves C 2004 Asian Lorises taxonomic problems caused by illegal trade In Nadler T Streicher U Ha T L eds Conservation of Primates in Vietnam Hanoi Vietnam Frankfurt Zoological Society OCLC 60527537 Stone Witmer Rehn James A G 1902 A collection of mammals from Sumatra with a review of genera Nycticebus and Tragulus Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 54 127 142 Thomas Oldfield 1922 Note on the nomenclature of the Northern Slow loris The Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 28 433 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sunda slow loris amp oldid 1188345274, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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