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Spizaetus hawk-eagles as predators of arboreal colobines
Ist Teil von
Primates, 2011-04, Vol.52 (2), p.105-110
Ort / Verlag
Japan: Springer Japan
Erscheinungsjahr
2011
Quelle
MEDLINE
Beschreibungen/Notizen
The predation pressure put on primates by diurnal birds of prey differs greatly between continents. Africa and South America have specialist raptors (e.g. crowned hawk-eagle
Stephanoaetus coronatus
and harpy eagle
Harpia harpyja
) whereas in Asia the only such specialist’s (Philippine eagle
Pithecophaga jefferyi
) distribution is largely allopatric with primates. The almost universal absence of polyspecific groups in Asia (common in Africa and South America) may indicate reduced predation pressure. As such there is almost no information on predation pressures on primates in Asia by raptors. Here we report successful predation of a juvenile banded langur
Presbytis femoralis
(~2 kg) by a changeable hawk-eagle
Spizaetus cirrhatus
. The troop that was attacked displayed no signs of being alarmed, and no calls were made before the event. We argue that in insular Southeast Asia, especially, large
Spizaetus
hawk-eagles (~2 kg) are significant predators of arboreal colobines. Using data on the relative size of sympatric
Spizaetus
hawk-eagles and colobines we make predictions on where geographically we can expect the highest predation pressure (Thai–Malay Peninsula) and which colobines are least (
Nasalis larvatus, Trachypithecus auratus, P. thomasi
) and most (
P. femoralis, T. cristatus
) affected.