

Species: Hylobates funereus (East Bornean gray gibbon).Species: Hylobates albibarbis (Bornean white-bearded gibbon).Species: Hylobates agilis (agile gibbon).Species: Hylobates abbotti (Abbott's gray gibbon).Species: Hoolock leuconedys (Eastern hoolock gibbon).


Unlike other animals, apes take care of their young for many years. They also breastfeed their young for an extending amount of time, like humans. They have live births after a gestation period of around eight and a half to nine months and typically give birth to only one or two babies at a time.

(Image credit: Kwita Izina) OffspringĪpes have offspring much like humans. Mountain gorillas only weigh four pounds when they're born. A chimp's diet is mainly fruits supplemented with insects, birds and small mammals, according to the Center for Great Apes. Orangutans eat a fruit diet that is supplemented with vegetation, invertebrates, mineral-rich soil and small vertebrates. Gibbons, for example, eat mostly fruit, but they also munch on leaves, flowers and insects. DietĪpes are herbivores for the most part, but they also may eat small animals or bugs to supplement their diet. In fact, only 3 percent of the animal kingdom practices monogamy, according to the Anthropological Institute of University Zürich-Irchel Winterthurerstrasse. Gibbons are monogamous, which is very rare in the animal kingdom. At night they sleep in nests made from branches or foliage on the ground or in trees. Chimpanzees are the most social of all the apes, and live in communities with 15 to 120 individuals.ĭuring the day ape families eat, play and protect each other. Gorillas live in family groups that can include as many as 30 members. Siamangs are so close that they almost never wander more than 30 feet (10 m) apart, according to the San Diego Zoo. Gibbons, for example, live in small family groups of two to six individuals. (Image credit: © Terry Whittaker, One-Time Use Only.) HabitsĪ group of apes is called a tribe or a shrewdness. An adult male northern white-cheeked gibbon ( Nomascus leucogenys) found in northern Vietnam and Laos.
