Forest Department and the International Fund for Animal Welfare-Wildlife Trust of India (IFAW-WTI) translocated the gibbon family comprising an adult male, an adult female and a male child on Thursday, officials said today.
Dr Nupur Buragohain, IFAW-WTI veterinarian who was a part of the team said the apes were healthy and fitted with micro-chip for future identification.
Stating this is one of the 20 stranded families living in Dello village, the officials said that due to lack of contiguous forests, the gibbons were forced to stray on the ground.
"The family was found in Enzeeno village in an area with absolutely no canopy", Dr Kuladeep Roy, Project Lead for IFAW-WTI's Dibang Valley Conservation Project, said.
Gibbons are seen in tropical and sub-tropical rain forests from north-east India to Indonesia, including the islands of Sumatra, Borneo and Java.