130 likes | 244 Views
White Handed Gibbon. By:Brittany. Introduction. My animal starts with a G and ends with an N. It lives in the rain forest. It has white and black fur. What is it?. Description.
E N D
White Handed Gibbon By:Brittany
Introduction • My animal starts with a G and ends with an N. It lives in the rain forest. It has white and black fur. What is it?
Description • Gibbons have a white ring around their face. The gibbons have black fur on their body. They also have black skin on their face, hands, and feet. • Gibbons have a people-shaped body, but they are not as tall as people. The gibbon’s height is 18-25 inches and their weight is 11-17.5 pounds.
`Lifespan • Gibbons live up to 30 to 40 years. The males and females live about the same amount of time.
Predator/Prey • People hunt gibbons. The gibbons hide in the trees. These animals are fruit eaters. They get food from the trees.
Protection • They protect themselves by running away. The gibbons keep the hurt gibbons in their habitat to help protect them.
Young • The gibbons have babies one time every 2-3 years. Gibbons have a baby one at a time. The parent gibbon takes care of them until they are up to six years old. First when gibbon is small the mom takes care of it. When the gibbon gets a little bigger it gets taken care of by its dad. Dad teaches it to swing from tree to tree. The babies are called young.
Behavior • The gibbon just swings from tree to tree in the wild. Gibbons like to sing in the morning. They stay in their habitat in the winter. Gibbons are active during the day.
Environment • The gibbons live in trees of a tropical rain forest. Gibbons are found in the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra and Thailand.
Endangered • The white-handed gibbons are endangered animals. People keep cutting down trees in their habitat. The people hunt the gibbons because they want to eat them.
Other Interesting Facts • An interesting fact about the gibbon is they sing. The gibbons swing from tree to tree. The gibbons have the longest arms of the primates.
Conclusion • I picked the gibbons because they sounded interesting. I sort of like monkeys. The White handed gibbons are endangered. We can help them by keeping people from cutting down the rain forest. We can also keep the gibbons in the zoo so people will not hunt them.
Bibliography • Encyclopedia of Mammals. New York: Marshall Cavendish, 1997. • Woods, Mae. Gibbons. Edina, MN: ABDO and Daughters, 1998. • Zoo School. “White Handed Gibbon.” Accessed on 12 Sept 2006 <http://www.zooschool./ecsd.net/white%20handed%20 gibbon.htm