A crested macaque (Macaca nigra) female with an offspring in Tangkoko forest, North Sulawesi, Indonesia. Climate change is one of the main factors affecting biodiversity worldwide at an alarming rate according to a team of scientists led by Antonio Acini Vasquez-Aguilar in their March 2024 research paper published on Environ Monit Assess. It might shift the geographic distribution of species, including species which depend greatly on forest cover such as primates, they say, as another team of scientists led by Miriam Plaza Pinto warns that "approximately one-quarter of primates' ranges have...
Image details
Contributor:
Pacific Imagica / Alamy Stock PhotoImage ID:
2X1R2B5File size:
33.9 MB (2.5 MB Compressed download)Releases:
Model - no | Property - noDo I need a release?Dimensions:
2809 x 4219 px | 23.8 x 35.7 cm | 9.4 x 14.1 inches | 300dpiDate taken:
20 January 2012Location:
Batuputih, Ranowulu, Bitung, North Sulawesi, IndonesiaMore information:
This image could have imperfections as it’s either historical or reportage.
A crested macaque (Macaca nigra) female with an offspring in Tangkoko forest, North Sulawesi, Indonesia. Climate change is one of the main factors affecting biodiversity worldwide at an alarming rate according to a team of scientists led by Antonio Acini Vasquez-Aguilar in their March 2024 research paper published on Environ Monit Assess. It might shift the geographic distribution of species, including species which depend greatly on forest cover such as primates, they say, as another team of scientists led by Miriam Plaza Pinto warns that "approximately one-quarter of primates' ranges have temperatures over historical ones." Tangkoko forest, a sanctuary where crested macaque lives, is suffering from temperature increase by up to 0.2 degree Celsius per year, according to a team of primatologists led by Marine Joly, adding that the overall fruit abundance is also decreased. In other words, climate change may reduce the habitat suitability of primate species, that could force them to move out of safe habitats and face more potential conflicts with human. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) concludes that rising temperatures have led to ecological, behavioral, and physiological changes in wildlife species and biodiversity. "In addition to increased rates of disease and degraded habitats, climate change is also causing changes in species themselves, which threaten their survival, " they wrote on IUCN.org.