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The golden snub-nosed monkey is an Old World monkey in the subfamily Colobinae.
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- In primate research, although male-male competition for mates and female mate choice are the common causes of sexual selection, female-female competition over males is especially important in polygynous species.
- The golden snub-nosed monkey gives birth from March to June.
- This approximates gestation at 6–7 months in length.
- Mating may occur throughout the year but peaks in the month of October.
- Males are sexually mature at about 5–7 years old.
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- Females are sexually mature at about 5 years old.
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- This antipredation hypothesis suggest that increased cohesion and large sleeping congregations might facilitate predator detection and enhance group defense.
- Along with thermoregulation, safety from predators is an important principle underlying the formation of sleeping clusters in primates.
- The thermoregulatory hypothesis suggests that a primary function of sleeping in clusters is the conservation of heat during cold temperatures.
- the most important one being a thermoregulatory process.
- There are several hypotheses to explain the formation of sleeping clusters,
- Adult males are usually observed sleeping by themselves or on the lookout for predators or dangers.
- The most common types of night-sleeping clusters were adult females and their young, followed by adult females with other adult females.
- They form larger sleeping clusters at night than in the daytime.
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- avoiding the upper canopy where it is cold and windy.
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- Monkeys often sleep in the lower stratum of the tree canopy,
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- but their thick coats can provide this warmth as well as sleeping in these clusters.
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- Keeping warm is critical for survival in freezing temperatures,
- However, in a detailed observation of the free-ranging band in the Qinling Mountains in central China, results have suggested that winter night activity of Rhinopithecus roxellana is a compromise between antipredator and thermoregulatory strategies and an adaptation to ecological conditions of their temperate habitat.
- However, in a detailed observation of the free-ranging band in the Qinling Mountains in central China, results have suggested that winter night activity of Rhinopithecus roxellana is a compromise between antipredator and thermoregulatory strategies and an adaptation to ecological conditions of their temperate habitat.
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- There is little information available on the sleeping cluster patterns of the Sichuan snub-nosed monkeys.
- The rest of the day, the members of the group remain closer to one another with the young protected at the center.
- the young are placed at the center of the group while the stronger adult males go to the scene of the alarm.
- When faced with danger from a predator such as the northern goshawk (Accipiter gentilis),
- Mothers often have helpers assisting them with the care of their young.
- Protecting the young is a group effort.
- In turn females will have more reproductive success and less infant losses.
- which in turn creates paternity confusion and means newly established alpha males will not risk killing what could be their own offspring.
- Female snub-nose monkeys will deliberately have "affairs" with all resident males in the surrounding area behind the harem-master's back,
- Unusually for a harem-forming species, infanticide by males is averted.
- while also protecting their young (usually observed at a distance by putting the young in the center of the pack).
- However, in conflicts against other units in the surrounding site, both males and females support each other,
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- Females of the golden snub-nosed monkey are usually observed to form several close associations with other females.
- Group members remain close to one another, interactions between different OMUs often result in confrontations.
- Adult females tend to socialize more with one another than with other males or juveniles.
- The male may stay solitary, often remaining away from the rest of the group members as they rest.
- Some observers have even come to conclude that these large foraging groups are multi-male and multi-female societies.
- These multi-tier societies consist of several OMUs that include one adult male plus a number of adult females and their offspring.
- The one-male-units (OMUs) are the basic social unit within groups of golden snub-nosed monkeys with many of the OMUs forming a bigger group.
- The social organization of this species can be quite complex.