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Rainforest Specialists

Lion-tailed Macaque

Macaca silenus

IUCN: Endangered
EndangeredIUCN Status
~3,000 – 3,500 in IndiaPopulation
3 – 10 kgAdult Weight
42 – 61 cmLength
OmnivoreDiet

About the Lion-tailed Macaque

The lion-tailed macaque is one of the rarest primates in the world and the most iconic symbol of the Western Ghats rainforest. Instantly recognisable by its spectacular silver-white mane framing a jet-black face — giving it the lion-like appearance that inspired its name — the species is found only in the hill forests of the Western Ghats in Kerala, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu. Roughly 3,000–3,500 individuals survive in fragmented forest patches, making every sighting a privilege.

Lion-tailed macaques are highly arboreal and spend almost their entire lives in the rainforest canopy, descending to the ground only reluctantly. They live in social groups of 10–20 individuals with a strict hierarchy, and their dog-like barks and high-pitched calls echo through the forest. Silent Valley National Park in Kerala — saved from a dam project in 1984 partly because of the lion-tailed macaque — is considered their most important refuge, and the species became the symbol of one of India's first major environmental campaigns.

Safari tips
Best time to spot
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Where to spot it

Parks and forests where you have the best chance of seeing Lion-tailed Macaque in the wild.

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