Dusky Leaf Monkey
A species of primate in the Cercopithecidae family
with the scientific name Trachypithecus obscurus. It occurs from India
to
Malaysia
and
Laos,
and in
Thailand it is found on the
southern peninsula, e.g. on the island archipelago of
Moo Koh
Angthong
in
Surat Thani
(fig.),
in Khao Sahm Roi Yot National Park
in
Prachuap Khirikhan,
Kaeng Krajahn National Park
in
Phetchaburi (fig.),
etc. It is a species of
leaf-eating monkey and hence spends most
of its time in trees, especially in the
middle and upper canopies of the forest. Adults have dark gray to black
fur with lighter grey on their chests and the top of their heads. They
have a black face with bristly hairs at the eyebrows, white circles
around the eyes and white skin at their mouth.
It is somewhat similar to the
Phayre's Leaf Monkey (fig.), but
has a darker fur. The
Dusky Leaf Monkey
is a kind of langur
and is
sometimes referred to as the Spectacled Langur (fig.) or
Spectacled Leaf Monkey, referring to the
white rings around their eyes, that somewhat resemble spectacles
(fig.).
The word langur comes from Hindi and means ‘long-tailed’. Interestingly, when born, infants have an orange coat and change to the
adult grey-black colour by the age of nine months. In Thai, this species is called
kaang waen thin tai.
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