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  • Yunnan bamboo pitviper, Trimeresurus stejnegeri yunnanensis (subspecies), Wuliangshan Nature Reserve, Mount Wuliang Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. It is a venomous pitviper subspecies endemic to China, and it is found in southern China , Yunnan and southwestern Sichuan. The species common names for Trimeresurus stejnegeri include bamboo viper, Chinese tree viper, bamboo snake, Chinese green tree viper, Chinese bamboo viper, Stejneger's pit viper, Stejneger's palm viper, red tail snake, Stejneger's bamboo pitviper, Formosan bamboo viper (for T. gramineus formosensis), and Taiwan green tree viper (for T. s. formosensis).
    MLU-20171004-184734-67-SN-v2.jpg
  • Yunnan bamboo pitviper, Trimeresurus stejnegeri yunnanensis (subspecies), Wuliangshan Nature Reserve, Mount Wuliang Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. It is a venomous pitviper subspecies endemic to China, and it is found in southern China , Yunnan and southwestern Sichuan. The species common names for Trimeresurus stejnegeri include bamboo viper, Chinese tree viper, bamboo snake, Chinese green tree viper, Chinese bamboo viper, Stejneger's pit viper, Stejneger's palm viper, red tail snake, Stejneger's bamboo pitviper, Formosan bamboo viper (for T. gramineus formosensis), and Taiwan green tree viper (for T. s. formosensis).
    MLU-20171004-185808-59S.jpg
  • Yunnan bamboo pitviper, Trimeresurus stejnegeri yunnanensis (subspecies), Wuliangshan Nature Reserve, Mount Wuliang Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. It is a venomous pitviper subspecies endemic to China, and it is found in southern China , Yunnan and southwestern Sichuan. The species common names for Trimeresurus stejnegeri include bamboo viper, Chinese tree viper, bamboo snake, Chinese green tree viper, Chinese bamboo viper, Stejneger's pit viper, Stejneger's palm viper, red tail snake, Stejneger's bamboo pitviper, Formosan bamboo viper (for T. gramineus formosensis), and Taiwan green tree viper (for T. s. formosensis).
    MLU-20171004-190510-28S.jpg
  • Yunnan bamboo pitviper, Trimeresurus stejnegeri yunnanensis (subspecies), Wuliangshan Nature Reserve, Mount Wuliang Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. It is a venomous pitviper subspecies endemic to China, and it is found in southern China , Yunnan and southwestern Sichuan. The species common names for Trimeresurus stejnegeri include bamboo viper, Chinese tree viper, bamboo snake, Chinese green tree viper, Chinese bamboo viper, Stejneger's pit viper, Stejneger's palm viper, red tail snake, Stejneger's bamboo pitviper, Formosan bamboo viper (for T. gramineus formosensis), and Taiwan green tree viper (for T. s. formosensis).
    MLU-20171004-185231-29US-v2.jpg
  • Yunnan bamboo pitviper, Trimeresurus stejnegeri yunnanensis (subspecies), Wuliangshan Nature Reserve, Mount Wuliang Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. It is a venomous pitviper subspecies endemic to China, and it is found in southern China , Yunnan and southwestern Sichuan. The species common names for Trimeresurus stejnegeri include bamboo viper, Chinese tree viper, bamboo snake, Chinese green tree viper, Chinese bamboo viper, Stejneger's pit viper, Stejneger's palm viper, red tail snake, Stejneger's bamboo pitviper, Formosan bamboo viper (for T. gramineus formosensis), and Taiwan green tree viper (for T. s. formosensis).
    MLU-20171004-185110-55S.jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, feeding in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-082604 (4).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti,  in a tree at Ta Cheng Natuyre reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-080554.jpg
  • Adult Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree Ta Cheng Natuyre reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-080611 (3).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-082500 (1).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-082508 (1).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting on the ground by Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-082540.jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti,  Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-082558 (2)_01vertical.jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, feeding in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-082608 (5).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, feeding in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-082942 (2).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, feeding in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-083000 (6).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, feeding in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-083008 (1).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti,  Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-083024 (1).jpg
  • Two Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-084814 (1).jpg
  • Two Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-084848 (3).jpg
  • Two Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-084814 (1)VERTICAL.jpg
  • Portrait of a Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti,  Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-085047 (2).jpg
  • Portrait of a Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti,  Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-085928 (2).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti,  playing in trees at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-093554 (1).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, hanging in a tree Ta Cheng Natuyre reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-073600.jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti,  looking in the camera Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-074058 (1).jpg
  • Adult Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-085102.jpg
  • Adult Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-085102crop.jpg
  • Adult Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree an looking up Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-085119.jpg
  • Adult Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-090907 (1).jpg
  • Portrait of Adult Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti,  Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-091254 (1).jpg
  • Portrait of Adult Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti,  Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-091245 (2).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti,  feeding in on a tree in Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-091443 (7).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, feeding on a tree in Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-091508 (1).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-092646 (1).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-092006.jpg
  • Young Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree in Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-092738vertical.jpg
  • Young Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree in Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-092738.jpg
  • Young Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree in Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-092740.jpg
  • Young Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree in Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-092741.jpg
  • Young Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti,  Ta Cheng Natuyre reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-093704.jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-081014 (3).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, a mother with her baby running across the path at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-082112 (1).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-082554.jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkeys, Rhinopithecus bieti,  Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-082558 (2).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, feeding in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-082944 (1).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, feeding in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-083002 (6).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, feeding in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-083014 (1).jpg
  • Young Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti,  sitting on a tree in Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-092756 (4).jpg
  • Young Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti,  hanging from a branch from a tree in Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-092948.jpg
  • Portrait of a Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti,  Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-085424 (4).jpg
  • Portrait of a Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti,  Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-090452 (1).jpg
  • Adult Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree Ta Cheng Natuyre reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-080558.jpg
  • Adult Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-090216 (1).jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti, sitting in a tree at Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-092722.jpg
  • Yunnan, or Black Snub-nosed monkey, Rhinopithecus bieti,  Ta Cheng Nature reserve, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-15-084520.jpg
  • The powerful hand of a dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115743-39US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, peeing, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-114717-16US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171003-152109-78US.jpg
  • Mother training her young on for a life in the canopy, Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171002-112726-82USN-v2.jpg
  • Mother training her young on for a life in the canopy, Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171001-123738-68S.jpg
  • Mother training her young on for a life in the canopy, Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171001-104812-28US.jpg
  • a young male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171001-102243-06US.jpg
  • Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, on the move, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-132548-43US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, eating baby squirrels, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115330-02US-v2.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, eating baby squirrels, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115330-01US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, lying on a tree branch in Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-113513-51US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting on a tree branch in  Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-113315-21US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171003-152653-90US-v2.jpg
  • Mother training her young on for a life in the canopy, Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171002-112724-78US.jpg
  • a young male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171001-102529-26US-v2.jpg
  • Mother training her young on for a life in the canopy, Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171001-104811-23S.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115654-34US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115653-27USN-v2.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115653-31US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115502-13US-v3.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, eating baby squirrels, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115423-92US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, eating baby squirrels, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115353-50US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting in a tree while eating a baby squirrel, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115243-18US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting in a tree while eating a baby squirrel, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115243-17US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting in a tree of the forest in Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-114316-73US-v2.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, hanging from a tree branch in Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-113822-31US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, lying on a tree branch in Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-113741-96US-v2.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, lying on a tree branch in Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-113518-64US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, lying on a tree branch in Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-113512-47US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting on a tree branch in  Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-111111-22US-v3.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting on a tree branch in  Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-113042-96US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171003-152356-21US-v2.jpg
  • Mother training her young on for a life in the canopy, Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171001-123737-64US.jpg
  • Male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171001-103633-17US.jpg
  • Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, on the move, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-132549-45US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting in a tree while eating a baby squirrel, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115314-83S.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, eating baby squirrels, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115331-10US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting in a tree of the forest in Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-114706-05US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting in a tree of the forest in Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-114205-61US-v2.jpg
  • The Skywalker hoolock gibbon or Gaoligong hoolock gibbon, Hoolock tianxing, Gaoligong Mountains National Nature Reserve, Yunnan Province, China<br />
<br />
It was first described in January 2017 in the American Journal of Primatology.  The Skywalker hoolock gibbon is named after Luke Skywalker from the Star Wars, as the scientists who described it are fans.<br />
<br />
The Skywalker hoolock gibbon is found in the tropical forests of eastern Myanmar and the Yunnan Province in southwestern China.It is listed as Endangered by IUCN as there is only about 200 individuals in China and an unknown number in Myanmar.
    MLU-20180422-153430-49US.jpg
  • Emperor newt, Tylototriton shanjing, is also called Mandarin newt or Mandarin salamander (in Chinese 红瘰疣螈), Gaoligong Mountains National Nature Reserve, Yunnan Province, China.<br />
<br />
It is a highly toxic newt native to a small area in Yunnan, China. They like to live in pools and slow-moving streams in subtropical forests at an altitude between 1 000 m to 2 500 metres above sea level.<br />
<br />
The major threat is over-collecting for traditional medicine. Small numbers are ending up in the pet trade, and its habitats are threatened by development for human settlement.
    MLU-20180421-120026-18SN.jpg
  • Mrs. Hume's pheasant, Syrmaticus humiae, female bird walking on ground in Baihualing, Gaoligongshan, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2018-04-14-091252 (2).jpg
  • The Skywalker hoolock gibbon or Gaoligong hoolock gibbon, Hoolock tianxing, Gaoligong Mountains National Nature Reserve, Yunnan Province, China<br />
<br />
It was first described in January 2017 in the American Journal of Primatology.  The Skywalker hoolock gibbon is named after Luke Skywalker from the Star Wars, as the scientists who described it are fans.<br />
<br />
The Skywalker hoolock gibbon is found in the tropical forests of eastern Myanmar and the Yunnan Province in southwestern China.It is listed as Endangered by IUCN as there is only about 200 individuals in China and an unknown number in Myanmar.
    MLU-20180422-143255-32S.jpg
  • The Skywalker hoolock gibbon or Gaoligong hoolock gibbon, Hoolock tianxing, Gaoligong Mountains National Nature Reserve, Yunnan Province, China<br />
<br />
It was first described in January 2017 in the American Journal of Primatology.  The Skywalker hoolock gibbon is named after Luke Skywalker from the Star Wars, as the scientists who described it are fans.<br />
<br />
The Skywalker hoolock gibbon is found in the tropical forests of eastern Myanmar and the Yunnan Province in southwestern China.It is listed as Endangered by IUCN as there is only about 200 individuals in China and an unknown number in Myanmar.
    MLU-20180422-122617-66US.jpg
  • The Skywalker hoolock gibbon or Gaoligong hoolock gibbon, Hoolock tianxing, Gaoligong Mountains National Nature Reserve, Yunnan Province, China<br />
<br />
It was first described in January 2017 in the American Journal of Primatology.  The Skywalker hoolock gibbon is named after Luke Skywalker from the Star Wars, as the scientists who described it are fans.<br />
<br />
The Skywalker hoolock gibbon is found in the tropical forests of eastern Myanmar and the Yunnan Province in southwestern China.It is listed as Endangered by IUCN as there is only about 200 individuals in China and an unknown number in Myanmar.
    MLU-20180422-115659-19S.jpg
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