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Yunnan Snub-nose Monkey Habitat Paradise
Yunnan Snub-nose Monkey Habitat Paradise
- Categories:Tourist
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- Time of issue:2020-08-18 17:36
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(Summary description)The Yunnan snub-nose monkeys have black-brown back and white abdomen. They are called "white monkeys" by the local people and are among the 25 most endangered primate species in today's world. According to the leaders of the nature reserve, in the 1960s and 1970s, there were more than 2000 Yunnan snub-nose monkeys in the Baima Snow Mountain area, but this number dropped sharply to about 70 in the early 1990s due to indiscriminate hunting. In addition, the existing natural populations of Yunnan snub-nose monkeys are almost isolated from each other and distributed in islands, so it is difficult for the populations to communicate genes between each other, which affects the propagation of Yunnan snub-nose monkeys.
Yunnan Snub-nose Monkey Habitat Paradise
(Summary description)The Yunnan snub-nose monkeys have black-brown back and white abdomen. They are called "white monkeys" by the local people and are among the 25 most endangered primate species in today's world. According to the leaders of the nature reserve, in the 1960s and 1970s, there were more than 2000 Yunnan snub-nose monkeys in the Baima Snow Mountain area, but this number dropped sharply to about 70 in the early 1990s due to indiscriminate hunting. In addition, the existing natural populations of Yunnan snub-nose monkeys are almost isolated from each other and distributed in islands, so it is difficult for the populations to communicate genes between each other, which affects the propagation of Yunnan snub-nose monkeys.
- Categories:Tourist
- Author:
- Origin:
- Time of issue:2020-08-18 17:36
- Views:
The Yunnan snub-nose monkeys have black-brown back and white abdomen. They are called "white monkeys" by the local people and are among the 25 most endangered primate species in today's world. According to the leaders of the nature reserve, in the 1960s and 1970s, there were more than 2000 Yunnan snub-nose monkeys in the Baima Snow Mountain area, but this number dropped sharply to about 70 in the early 1990s due to indiscriminate hunting. In addition, the existing natural populations of Yunnan snub-nose monkeys are almost isolated from each other and distributed in islands, so it is difficult for the populations to communicate genes between each other, which affects the propagation of Yunnan snub-nose monkeys.
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