Abstract
The slow loris (Nycticebus coucang) is an Asian prosimian for which no data on vocalizations other than verbal description have been provided. Five different calls have been previously reported: a “growl” or “chatter” that the loris emits when disturbed, a “squeak,” a “quaink,” a “whistle,” and an infant click call. Calls were recorded from nine different slow lorises that were being observed in the course of another study. Vocalizations were correlated with the behavior of the calling animal as well as the behavior of its cagemate(s). A variety of methods was used to elicit sounds which were then recorded; sonagrams were made from recordings. Four types of calls were identified. They correspond to all but the quaink and the squeak calls noted above. The pant-growl’s intensity was directly proportional to the degree of disturbance exhibited by the vocalizing animal. The chitter was heard during fights or when an animal was extremely disturbed. The whistle was heard when a female was in estrus. Infant click calls, a series of high-frequency pulses, were made when the infant was separated from its mother. The four calls recorded in the present study may represent only two types: the pant-growl and chitter have similar components and appear to be parts of a graded series of vocalizations that may be derived developmentally from the infant click call; the second type, the whistle call, may be unique to an estrous for courting) animal. The vocal repertoire ofN. coucang compares in size, type, and behavioral context to those of other lorisid prosimians.
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Daschbach, N.J., Schein, M.W. & Haines, D.E. Vocalizations of the Slow Loris,Nycticebus coucang (Primates, Lorisidae). Int J Primatol 2, 71–80 (1981). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02692301
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02692301