Yes. Black gibbons are critically endangered.
Yes. Most species of Gibbons are endangered and some are even critically endangered.
Reduction of the tropical rainforest is the primary threat to gibbons. Poaching for food or capturing young gibbons for the pet trade is a secondary, but sometimes equally serious threat. The numbers of all gibbons in Asia have decreased rapidly in the past fifteen years.
it is not endangered
Yes, black piranhas are endangered.
gibbons,Asian golden cat,babirusa,Wondiwoi tree kangaroo
There are believed to be less than 4,000 Silvery Gibbons left in the wild, with populations decreasing due to habitat loss and fragmentation. They are classified as endangered by the IUCN.
Black bears are not endangered, but they are threatened.
The black dragon fish is indead endangered
Gibbons tend to be black or buff (a tan-like color). Genetic testing has shown that black is a dominant gene. See the book The Gibbons of Khao Yai: Seasonal Variation in Behavior and Ecology (2009) by Thad Q. Bartlett.
Gibbons tend to be black or buff (a tan-like color). Genetic testing has shown that black is a dominant gene. See the book The Gibbons of Khao Yai: Seasonal Variation in Behavior and Ecology (2009) by Thad Q. Bartlett.
Since 'black brie' is a type of cheese, it is not endangered.
The American black bear is not endangered, but the Asiatic is threatened.