Non-human primates whose ranges overlap with Indigenous lands (IMAGE)
Caption
Nonhuman primates whose territories overlap with Indigenous lands include those from the Neotropics, top row; Afrotropics, middle row; and Indo-Malay, bottom row. Species include, from top left to top right: the critically endangered northern muriqui; the black-capped capuchin, a species of least concern; the Colombian night monkey and the munduruku marmoset, both classified as vulnerable. Middle row, left to right: the critically endangered Western gorilla; the grivet monkey, a species of least concern; the spectacled lesser galago, a species of least concern; and the critically endangered Western chimpanzee. Bottom row, left to right: the critically endangered white-headed langur; the Philippine slow loris, which is classified as vulnerable; the endangered skywalker gibbon; and the critically endangered Sumatran orangutan.
Credit
Photo credits, top row, left to right: Priscila Pereira, Joan de la Malla, Juan Felipe León León, and Marlyson Costa. Middle row, left to right: Rhett Butler, Sarie Van Belle, Yvonne A. de Jong and Thomas M. Butynski, and K. Hockings. Bottom row, left to right: Huang Chengming, Hery Sudarno, Fan Peng-Fei, and Perry van Duijnhoven.
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