The earliest record of the golden langur is in an 1838 paper by Robert Boileau Pemberton which states that "Griffith observed these monkeys near Tongso in Central Bhutan." However, since Pemberton's work was lost and not rediscovered until the 1970s, the scientific discovery of the golden langur unfolded differently. In 1907,
Edward Oswald Shebbeare—who was out with some hunters and forest rangers—reported seeing a "cream coloured langur" in the vicinity of the Jamduar. However, neither a photograph nor a live or dead specimen was presented at that time. The first reference to the golden langur in print, as an animal of unidentified taxonomic status, was in a 1919 publication that stated: "
Pithecus sp? – A pale yellow coloured langur is common in the adjoining district of
Goalpara (Assam). Jerdon reported one from
Terai, the adjacent district on the (west) side, which Blanford suggested might be
P. entellus." In February 1947, in the Forest Rest House visitors' book in Raimona, a few miles south of Jamduar, C. G. Baron reported seeing some langurs whose "whole body and tail is one colour – a light silvery-gold, somewhat like the hair of a blonde." A year later, back in Jamduar, H. E. Tyndale, a tea planter, reported seeing "Sankosh cream langurs." However, it wasn't until a few years later that a focused effort to identify the golden langur was mounted by Gee, who traveled back to Jamduar in November 1953. His team was able to observe three groups of golden langurs, all on the east bank of the Sankosh River. The first group was observed on the Bhutan side of the border; the second group, a large one of 30 to 40 individuals, a mile north of Jamduar on the Indian side; and a third group four to five miles (6.44 km to 8.05 km) south near Raimona. Colour movies of the second group were made by Gee. In August 1954, Gee reported his findings to an expert at the
Zoological Society of London, who advised that the golden langur might be a new species. In January 1955, Gee also reported his results to the
Zoological Survey of India (ZSI) and, after showing his movies of the golden langurs, suggested that Jamduar be included in the then-upcoming ZSI survey of that region. The suggestion received the support of Dr.
Sunder Lal Hora, then Director of ZSI, and later that year six specimens of the golden langur were collected by the survey party. The following year, Dr. H. Khajuria, a taxonomist who studied the specimens, described the new species naming it
Presbystis geei in honour of Gee.
Taxonomy There are two subspecies of this species: •
Trachypithecus geei geei Khajuria, 1956 •
Trachypithecus geei bhutanensis Wangchuk, 2003 The subspecies are separated by a
geological fault in the Himalayas called the
Main Frontal Thrust.
T. g. bhutanensis occurs in the northern part of the species range in Bhutan and
T. g. geei is found in the south of Bhutan and Assam in northern India. In Bhutan, it has
hybridised with
T. pileatus, the capped langur. This is believed to be due to the construction of permanent bridges across the Chamkar River, a tributary of the
Mangde River which separates the two species. == Physical description ==