Estimated reading time: 12 minutes
Explore capped langur facts about this graceful and beautiful leaf monkey’s habitat and threats in India, Bhutan, Bangladesh, and Myanmar. Sadly, they are listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List due to rapid population declines from palm oil and mining deforestation. Additionally, a capped langur hybrid with Phayre’s langurs threatens both species survival. Once widespread, their numbers have nearly halved in some regions like Assam due to the accelerating loss of native forest cover. Directly threatened by palm oil and monoculture expansion, this species is now confined to small, isolated forest fragments. Learn about capped langur facts below and how you can take action to save them.
In the forests of #Bangladesh 🇧🇩 and northern #India 🇮🇳 lives a remarkable #primate with soulful hazel eyes 🐵🐒 on the verge of #extinction from #palmoil #deforestation. Help the Capped #Langur and #Boycottpalmoil 🌴🔥🚫 #Boycott4Wildlife @palmoildetect https://palmoildetectives.com/2026/01/11/capped-langur-trachypithecus-pileatus/
The intelligent and social Capped #Langur 🙉🐒🐵 is under pressure from #palmoil #deforestation and hunting in #India 🇮🇳 Troops are interbreeding with Phayre’s #langurs to survive. Fight for them and #Boycottpalmoil 🌴☠️❌ #Boycott4Wildlife @palmoildetect https://palmoildetectives.com/2026/01/11/capped-langur-trachypithecus-pileatus/
Capped Langur Trachypithecus pileatus
IUCN Red List Status: Vulnerable
Location: India, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Myanmar
This species inhabits subtropical and tropical dry forests, primarily in the foothills and highlands south of the Brahmaputra River and across fragmented patches in northeastern South Asia.
Key Takeaways
- Capped Langurs are vulnerable due to habitat loss from palm oil, mining, and illegal logging, with their populations declining significantly.
- These primates inhabit fragmented forests in India, Bangladesh, Bhutan, and Myanmar, relying on diverse food sources.
- Hybridization with Phayre’s Langur threatens their genetic integrity, resulting from habitat degradation and limited mating options.
- Conservation efforts must focus on raising awareness, protecting habitats, and boycotting products made with palm oil to aid in their survival.
- Capped Langurs’ complex social structures and behaviors highlight their intelligence and the urgent need for effective conservation strategies.
Table of contents
- Appearance and behaviour
- Threats
- Geographic range
- Diet
- Mating and reproduction
- FAQs
- How many capped langurs are left in the wild?
- What is the average lifespan of a capped langur?
- Capped langur vs golden langur, what’s the difference?
- Why is a capped langur hybrid with the phayre’s langur dangerous for both species?
- What is the meaning of the capped langur Assamese name ‘Tupimuria Hanuman’?
- Why are capped langurs under threat?
- Do capped langurs make good pets?
- What are the major conservation challenges for capped langurs?
- Take Action!
- Support the conservation of this species
- Further information
- How can I help the #Boycott4Wildlife?
- Take action in five ways!
- Learn about other animals endangered by palm oil and other agriculture
- Learn about “sustainable” palm oil greenwashing
- Read more about RSPO greenwashing
- A 2019 World Health Organisation (WHO) report into the palm oil industry and RSPO finds extensive greenwashing of palm oil deforestation and the murder of endangered animals (i.e. biodiversity loss)
Appearance and behaviour
With their black-tufted crown, pale fur, and soulful eyes, capped langurs are among the most visually distinctive primates in the Eastern Himalayas. Their fur ranges from silver-grey to golden orange, with darker limbs and a black cap that gives them their name. They move gracefully through the canopy, rarely descending to the forest floor except for play or social grooming.
Capped langurs live in unimale, multifemale groups with sizes ranging from 8 to 15 individuals. They spend most of their time feeding (up to 67%) or resting (up to 40%), engaging in complex social grooming and vocal communication. Daily movements range from 320–800 metres across fragmented habitats of 21–64 hectares. Grooming is an important social activity, with females often taking turns in allomothering behaviour.









Threats
Palm oil, teak and rubber monoculture plantations
The spread of oil palm and other monoculture crops such as teak and rubber is destroying the capped langur’s native forests at an alarming rate. These industrial plantations eliminate the diverse tree species that capped langurs rely on for food and shelter, leaving them with little to survive on. Once a landscape is cleared and replaced with palm oil or other single crops, it becomes a green desert devoid of biodiversity, pushing the species closer to extinction. In regions like Assam and Bangladesh, palm oil is a major driver of habitat fragmentation and degradation, especially in forest corridors that once connected populations.

Timber deforestation
Widespread illegal logging, often fuelled by demand for timber and firewood, is rapidly eroding the capped langur’s habitat. Fruiting and lodging trees that are vital to their survival are cut down, leaving forests patchy and disconnected. As their home ranges shrink, capped langur groups are forced into smaller fragments, increasing their vulnerability to predators, food shortages, and inbreeding. In some areas, this pressure has led to local extinctions or the collapse of entire populations.
Slash-and-burn agriculture
Slash-and-burn agriculture destroys habitat for capped langurs and often brings them into closer contact with human settlements, increasing conflict and risk of hunting or roadkill. Forest recovery from this can take decades—time the capped langur simply doesn’t have.
Hunting and the illegal pet trade
Capped langurs are hunted for their meat, pelts, and for sale in the illegal pet trade. In many tribal and rural areas of Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, and Manipur, they are still targeted despite legal protections. Their pelts are used to make traditional knife sheaths, and infants are often captured after killing their mothers, then sold as pets. This exploitation causes severe suffering and has a devastating impact on group structures, leading to long-term population decline.
Roads cut into rainforests for mines and tea plantations
As forests are cut into smaller patches for roads, mining, tea plantations, and settlements, capped langur populations become increasingly isolated. Small, disconnected populations face higher risks of inbreeding, loss of genetic diversity, and eventual extinction. In some regions, such as Tinsukia and Sonitpur, populations have already disappeared due to this fragmentation. The collapse of corridors also disrupts daily movement, feeding patterns, and access to mates—placing enormous stress on surviving individuals.
Capped Langur hybrid with the Phayre’s langur
Due to the rapid degradation of their forest, capped langurs are increasingly forming mixed-species groups with the closely related Phayre’s langur Trachypithecus phayrei. Recent studies in northeast Bangladesh confirms genetically that hybridisation is occurring. Moreover this could mean the extinction of the capped langur lineage. Although hybridisation can happen naturally, in this case it is being driven palm oil deforestation, forcing species into overlapping territories with fewer options for mates. This phenomenon is both a symptom and a driver of capped langur decline, complicating conservation.
Mining, infrastructure, and political conflict
Open-cast coal mining, limestone extraction, and petroleum exploration have all contributed to the destruction of capped langur habitat across Assam and Nagaland. Infrastructure projects, such as highways and border fences, not only destroy habitat directly but also block animal movements and isolate populations. In border regions, armed conflict and territorial skirmishes have already extirpated capped langurs from several reserves, such as the Nambhur and Rengma forests. Weak law enforcement allows habitat destruction to continue unchecked in many regions.
Geographic range
Capped langurs are found in northeastern India (Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Meghalaya, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram, and Tripura), Bhutan, northwestern Myanmar, and northeastern and central Bangladesh. They occur at elevations from 10 to 3,000 metres across hill forests, riverine reserves, and protected areas. However, their range is now severely fragmented by human development, with some populations disappearing from former strongholds due to mining, conflict, and agricultural encroachment.
Diet
Primarily folivorous, the capped langur’s diet includes mature and young leaves, petioles, seeds, flowers, bamboo shoots, bark, and occasionally caterpillars. They forage on more than 43 plant species, with favourites including banyan (Ficus benghalensis), sacred fig (Ficus religiosa), Terminalia bellerica, and Mallotus philippensis. Seasonal availability influences their feeding patterns, but they consistently prefer fruiting and flowering trees.
Mating and reproduction
Breeding usually occurs in the dry season, with birthing concentrated between late December and May. The gestation period lasts about 200 days, and the interbirth interval is approximately two years. Only parous females participate in allomothering, allowing new mothers time to forage and recover, a behaviour rare among langurs and considered a form of altruism.
FAQs
How many capped langurs are left in the wild?
Exact numbers are uncertain, but estimates suggest the population in Assam has declined from 39,000 in 1989 to approximately 18,600 between 2008 and 2014 (Choudhury, 2014). This halving reflects habitat loss and increasing fragmentation, particularly in Upper Assam and the Barak Valley.
What is the average lifespan of a capped langur?
While data is limited, langurs of this genus generally live 20–25 years in the wild. Captive lifespans may extend slightly due to the absence of predators and constant food supply, though such conditions often lead to stress.
Capped langur vs golden langur, what’s the difference?
While both are diurnal, tree-dwelling monkeys that live in small, single-male social groups, they differ significantly in their physical traits, geographic ranges and level of extinction risk. The golden langur Trachypithecus geei has a uniform cream-to-golden coat and a completely black face. They eat a highly selective diet of leaves and fruits, and are restricted to a tiny, endangered pocket of western Assam and Bhutan.
In contrast, the capped langur Trachypithecus pileatus features a distinct cap of dark hair on their heads with a grey body, maintains a more varied diet of leaves, seeds, and bark, and holds a wider, vulnerable distribution across northeastern India, Bangladesh, and Myanmar.
Why is a capped langur hybrid with the phayre’s langur dangerous for both species?
Scientific research shows that this sudden hybridisation or interbreedin is an emergency response to severe deforestation, driven by logging, mining and palm oil deforestation in places like Northeast India and Bangladesh. As the dense rainforests are cut down into tiny, isolated “forest islands,” the small, declining populations of both endangered species become trapped. Single adult langurs looking to leave their birth group are unable to find a mate of their own kind. Therefore they are forced to find mates in other species instead. Consequently, genetic research has found such couplings result in hybrid offspring who are fertile. Therefore the wild populations of both species decrease rapidly.
What is the meaning of the capped langur Assamese name ‘Tupimuria Hanuman’?
In Assam, the capped langur is called “Tupimuria Hanuman.” A highly descriptive name that translates literally to “the one with a cap on his head.” This title combines the Assamese words tupi (cap or hat) and mur (head) to perfectly capture the monkey’s most defining physical feature. Essentially their distinct crown of dark, backward-facing hair that resembles a skullcap. The term “Hanuman” is a traditional designation used throughout the region for long-tailed, black-faced monkeys to connect them with the monkey deity of Hindu tradition and separate them from shorter-tailed macaques.
Why are capped langurs under threat?
Their decline is due to relentless deforestation, palm oil and monoculture plantations, illegal logging, and road-building. Slash-and-burn agriculture and mining also play a major role. Capped langurs are hunted in some regions for meat, pelts, and as pets, particularly in Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, and Nagaland.
Do capped langurs make good pets?
Absolutely not. Capped langurs are intelligent, social beings that rely on complex forest habitats and close-knit family groups. Removing them from the wild fuels extinction and causes immense trauma. Many die during illegal capture and transport. Keeping them as pets is a selfish act that destroys lives. If you care about capped langurs, never support the exotic pet trade!
What are the major conservation challenges for capped langurs?
The biggest issues are hybridisation with other primate species, habitat fragmentation, palm oil expansion, and human-wildlife conflict. The 2018 study in Satchari National Park found that local attitudes toward conservation vary by occupation, education, and gender, which means education and outreach are crucial. A big challenge is the rise in hybridisation with sympatric Phayre’s langurs, driven by habitat degradation—this poses long-term genetic risks (Ahmed et al., 2024).
Take Action!
Capped langurs are vanishing before our eyes, driven to the brink by out-of-control palm oil expansion, deforestation, and development. You can help save them.
Refuse to buy products made with palm oil. Support indigenous-led conservation in northeast India and the Eastern Himalayas. Demand governments halt the destruction of old-growth forests and restore wildlife corridors. Spread awareness and challenge the illegal wildlife trade. #BoycottPalmOil #Boycott4Wildlife #Vegan #BoycottMeat
Support the Capped Langur by going vegan and boycotting palm oil in the supermarket, it’s the #Boycott4Wildlife
Support the conservation of this species
This animal has no protections in place. Read about other forgotten species here. Create art to support this forgotten animal or raise awareness about them by sharing this post and using the #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife hashtags on social media. Also you can boycott palm oil in the supermarket.
Further information
Ahmed, T., Hasan, S., Nath, S., Biswas, S., et al. (2024). Mixed-Species Groups and Genetically Confirmed Hybridization Between Sympatric Phayre’s Langur (Trachypithecus phayrei) and Capped Langur (T. pileatus) in Northeast Bangladesh. International Journal of Primatology, 46(1), 210–228. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10764-024-00459-x
Das, J., Chetry, D., Choudhury, A.U., & Bleisch, W. (2020). Trachypithecus pileatus (errata version published in 2021). The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020: e.T22041A196580469. https://dx.doi.org/10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-3.RLTS.T22041A196580469.en
Hasan, M.A.U., & Neha, S.A. (2018). Group size, composition and conservation challenges of capped langur (Trachypithecus pileatus) in Satchari National Park, Bangladesh. Retrieved from https://www.researchgate.net/publication/339550399
Wikipedia. (n.d.). Capped langur. Retrieved April 6, 2025, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capped_langur


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