Hylobates lar
TAXONOMY
Hylobates lar (Linnaeus, 1771), Malacca, Malaysia. Two subspecies in Thailand and southwest China (H. l. entelloides H. carpenteri, and possibly H. yunnensis); one in the Malay Peninsula (H. l. lar); one in north Sumatra (H. l. vestitus).
OTHER COMMON NAMES
English: Common gibbon, white-handed gibbon; French: Gibbon lar, gibbon a mains blanches; German: Weisshand-Gibbon; Spanish: Gibon de manos blancas.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Male size 17.1–23 in (44–59 cm), female 16.5–22.8 in (42–58 cm); male weight 11–16.8 lb (5–7.6 kg), female 9.7–15 lb (4.4–6.8 kg). White face ring, hands, and feet. Asexually dichromatic in Thailand (either very dark or very pale), otherwise polychromatic (dark brown to light buff); white face ring, often fainter in female.
DISTRIBUTION
East of Salween to Mekong Rivers in Thailand, and across into southwest China, south to Mudah River, West Malaysia; south of Perak and Kelantan Rivers in West Malaysia; north of Lake Toba in Sumatra, Indonesia.
HABITAT
Tropical evergreen rainforest.
BEHAVIOR
Population density 2.9 groups/2.5 mi2 (km2); home range 101 ac (41 ha), 55% defended as territory 49.4 ac (20 ha); day range 0.9 mi (1.5 km). Male, simple or quiver hoots; female, longer climax to great call, eight notes, 21 seconds (Malaya), 18 seconds (Thailand), 14–17 seconds (Sumatra).
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
Diet is mainly fruit, including figs, also flowers, leaves, and animal matter.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Monogamous. Single young produced every two to three years.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Lower Risk/Near Threatened.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
Elusive, respected, popular as pet in some areas.




