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Mantled guereza

The mantled guereza (Colobus guereza), also known simply as the guereza, the eastern black-and-white colobus, or the Abyssinian black-and-white colobus, is a black-and-white colobus, a type of Old World monkey. It is native to much of west central and east Africa, including Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and Chad. The species consists of several subspecies that differ in appearance. It has a distinctive appearance, which is alluded to in its name; the long white fringes of hair that run along each side of its black trunk are known as a mantle. Its face is framed with white hair and it has a large white tail tuft.

Mantled guereza[1]
Male at the Henry Doorly Zoo
Female with infant at Münster Zoo
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Primates
Suborder: Haplorhini
Infraorder: Simiiformes
Family: Cercopithecidae
Genus: Colobus
Species:
C. guereza
Binomial name
Colobus guereza
Rüppell, 1835
Mantled guereza range

The mantled guereza is diurnal and arboreal, found in both deciduous and evergreen forests. It is an adaptable species that can cope with habitat disturbance and prefers secondary forest close to rivers or lakes. Although previously thought to eat only leaves, it also eats seeds, fruits, and arthropods. It is able to digest plant material with a high fibre content with its specialised stomach and may only eat from a few plant species at a time. It is preyed on by birds of prey and some mammals, such as the common chimpanzee and the leopard.

The mantled guereza lives in social groups of three to fifteen individuals. These groups normally include a dominant male, several females, and the offspring of the females. It has a polygynous mating system and copulation is initiated with vocal communication. After a gestation period of just over five months, infants are born with pink skin and white fur, which darkens to the adult coloration by three to four months. The mantled guereza is well known for its dawn chorus, the males' "roar" is a method of long-distance communication that reinforces territorial boundaries. It also makes other vocalization and uses body postures, movements, and facial expressions to communicate.

The mantled guereza is listed as Least Concern by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) because it is widespread – although it is locally threatened in some areas, the decline is not great enough to list it in a higher category of threat. However, one subspecies found in Kenya is listed as Endangered. It can survive well in degraded forests and in some areas it is more common in logged areas than unlogged ones. The mantled guereza is also threatened by hunting for bushmeat and for its skin.

Etymology edit

The mantled guereza has many alternative common names including the guereza, the eastern black-and-white colobus, the magistrate colobus,[2] or the Abyssinian black-and-white colobus.[3] The name "mantled" refers to its mantle, the long silky white fringes of hair that run along its body and "guereza" is the native name of the monkey in Ethiopia.[4] The scientific name Colobus derives from Greek kolobus meaning "mutilated" which refers to its lack of thumbs.[5]

Taxonomic classification edit

The mantled guereza was first classified by Eduard Rüppell, a German naturalist and explorer, during his trip to Abyssinia between 1830 and 1834.[6] He wrote about the species in Neue Wirbelthiere con Abyssinien, Saengthiere in 1835.[7] It was first seen in Europe in 1890 in Berlin Zoological Garden when three individuals were purchased from a dealer from Massawa, Eritrea.[8]

 
Distribution map of subspecies of Mantled guereza

The mantled guereza is in the Colobinae subfamily, also known as the leaf-eating monkeys, a group of Old World monkeys from Asia and Africa. This subfamily is split into three groups, the colobus monkeys of Africa, of which the mantled guereza is a part, the langurs, or leaf monkeys, of Asia, and an "odd-nosed" group. The African colobus monkeys are divided again by distinctions in color, behavior, and ecology. The three genera are the black-and-white colobi, the red colobi, and the olive colobi. There are three black-and-white colobi: the mantled guereza, Colobus guereza, the king colobus, C. polykomos, and the Angola colobus, C. angolensis.[9] Groves lists seven subspecies of mantled guereza in Mammal Species of the World (MSW) (2005).[1] The validity of the Djaffa Mountain guereza, C. g. gallarum, is uncertain, although not listed by Groves in MSW, it is recognised in his 2007 Colobinae review paper,[10] and by International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) assessors Gippolliti and Butynski in 2008.[2]

  • Western guereza, Colobus guereza occidentalis, occurs from eastern Nigeria, Cameroon, and Gabon at the edge of its western range to South Sudan and Uganda, west of the Nile.
  • Omo River guereza or Abyssinian black-and-white colobus, C. g. guereza, found in Ethiopia, in the highlands west of the Rift Valley down to the reaches of the Awash River, the Omo River, and in the Blue Nile gorge.
  • Djaffa Mountains guereza or Neumann's black-and-white colobus, C. g. gallarum, found in the Ethiopian Highlands east of the Rift Valley.
  • Dodinga Hills guereza, C. g. dodingae, found in the Didinga Hills in South Sudan.
  • Mau Forest guereza, C. g. matschiei, occurs from western Kenya and Uganda south into northern Tanzania.
  • Mt Uaraguess guereza or Percival's black-and-white colobus, C. g. percivali, found in the Matthews Range in Kenya.
  • Eastern black-and-white colobus, C. g. kikuyuensis, occurs in Kenya on the Ngong Escarpment of Mount Kenya and in the Aberdare Range.
  • Kilimanjaro guereza, C. g. caudatus, found in Tanzania and Kenya in the forests surrounding Mount Kilimanjaro and Mount Meru.

The morphological difference between subspecies is most pronounced between the southeastern Kilimanjaro guereza, C. g. caudatus, and the northwestern western guereza, C. g. occidentalis. The intermediate subspecies show a gradual change between the two.[10]

Physical description edit

 
A skull at the Museum Wiesbaden in Wiesbaden, Germany

The mantled guereza has a distinctive pelage, which is mostly black, with long white fringes of silky hair—known as a mantle or ornamentation—along the sides of its body and tail. The bands that make up the mantle start at the shoulders and extend along the back until they connect at the lower torso. The tail is long and ends in a white tuft which varies in how much it covers the tail. These features vary in color among subspecies, for example the tail of C. g. guereza is gray until the white tail tuft which covers half of its length, while the tail tuft of C. g. caudatus makes up 80% of the tail. The mantle color ranges from white to cream or yellow. Its face is framed by white hair and it has bushy cheek hairs. The thigh has a white stripe.[11]

Infants are born with pink skin and white hair. The hair and skin darken as they age and by three to four months they attain adult coloration. Male usually gain their coloration before females.[12] The male typically weighs 9.3 and 13.5 kilograms (21 and 30 lb) and the female weighs between 7.8 and 9.2 kilograms (17 and 20 lb). The head and body length averages 61.5 centimetres (24.2 in) for males and 57.6 centimetres (22.7 in) for females. Like most colobi, the mantled guereza has a small thumb that is vestigial.[13][14] There is dentition sexual dimorphism among the subspecies. In some, the males have larger teeth than females, in others the reverse is true, and some have no significant difference.[15]

Distribution and habitat edit

 
Mantled guerezas are arboreal and prefer secondary forests.

The mantled guereza is distributed throughout Equatorial Africa. It ranges from Nigeria and Cameroon in the west to Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, and northern Tanzania in the east.[11][13] The mantled guereza lives in both deciduous and evergreen forests. It mainly inhabits forest and savannah woodlands and often extend into highland and montane forests.[16] It can be found in other forest habitats, both primary and secondary, such as riparian (near fresh or brackish water), gallery, and upland forests. It is particularly common in forests close to rivers and lakes and at high elevations.[17] It can be found in elevations as high as 3,300 metres (10,800 ft).[18] This species prefers secondary forests and selects them over old-growth forests if given the choice.[19] It is likely that the mantled guereza prefers these forests due to the increased number of food trees and the weaker chemical defenses of the species within.[19] The mantled guereza is sometimes found in swamps[20] as well as human-made habitats such as Eucalyptus plantations, which may be frequented when the monkey has nutritional deficiencies.[18]

Ecology edit

The mantled guereza is primarily arboreal, but does sometimes descend on the ground to forage and travel, perhaps more so than most other colobines. It is diurnal and rests for up to half the day. Foraging or travelling are the next most common activity. Sometime after dawn, mantled guereza groups leave their sleeping trees and will return to them at dusk. During the day, the mantled guereza has long rest periods in between periods of moving and feeding.[21][22][23] Other activities, including grooming, greeting, playing and being vigilant, are performed to a lesser extent.[22][23]

 
The diet of the mantled guereza is predominantly leaves, often of only a few tree species.

Despite its reputation as an exclusive leaf-eater, the mantled guereza is not an obligate folivore.[14] While it mainly eats leaves and fruit, its diet is quite variable. It may eat bark, wood, seeds, flowers, petioles, lianas, aquatic-plants, arthropods, soil, and even concrete from buildings.[24] The amount of each food item in its diet varies by area and time of year. Nutritional factors like protein, tannins, and sodium levels in leaves influence its food choices. It may even intermittently travel longer distances to access plants with higher levels of nutrition.[25] Leaves usually make up over half of its diet, although fruits are occasionally eaten more depending on the season.[14][18] When foraging for leaves, the mantled guereza prefers young ones over old.[19] With fleshy fruits, the mantled guereza prefers to eat them unripe, which may serve to reduce competition with primates that eat ripe fruits.[24] It consumes a number of plant species but only some make up most of its diet at a specific site.[20][24]

Like all colobi, the mantled guereza is able to digest leaves and other plant fibers with a large, multi-chambered stomach that contains bacteria in certain areas.[26] Like most colobines, it prefers foods with high fiber content that can be easily extracted with its specialized stomach.[25] The mantled guereza is mostly preyed on by the crowned hawk-eagle,[27] but it is also eaten by other birds of prey such as Verreaux's eagle.[18] The common chimpanzee is known to hunt the guereza.[28] The leopard is another possible predator.[29]

Behaviour edit

Social structure edit

 
Social grooming or allogrooming mainly occurs between females and is an important social interaction in mantled guereza groups.

The mantled guereza lives in stable social groups usually containing three to fifteen members.[22] The groups usually contain one male, several females and juveniles. In some populations, groups containing several males are common.[30] In multi-male groups, males tend to be aggressive with one another with one being dominant. Some males may be expelled from these groups.[21] Multi-male groups may contain father-son pairs or unrelated males.[31] Males that are not part of groups either live solitarily or with other outside males in bachelor groups. The females keep the groups cohesive and they are matrilineally related. They rarely disperse from their natal groups, except possibly when they break apart.[21] Males on the other hand, usually leave when they become subadults or adults. They may start out being solitary and or in bachelor groups. They gain entry into a social group either by being on the periphery or displacing a group male.[18]

Because of its low quality diet and the dispersed distribution of its food, the mantled guereza has a resident-egalitarian social structure. Female guerezas living in a group often have an egalitarian dominance style with no formalized rank relations. Relationships are relaxed and friendly with rare signals of dominance or subordinance. Physical aggression within the group is usually not harmful and rarely escalates into a conflict. Allogrooming is an important part of mantled guereza interactions and mostly occurs between females.[32] The adult males rarely groom in the groups. While not strictly territorial, mantled guereza groups can be aggressive towards each other.[22] In some populations, groups may defend core areas (which exist as a small part of the home range), resources, and mates. During intergroup encounters, males can engage in direct or indirect mate defense, like defending a female's resources.[33] It is the males that participate in agonistic inter-group encounters but female may do so as well.[22] Aggressive encounters between groups usually involve chases, displays and vocalizations rather than physical contact.[22]

Two Mantled guereza in a Japanese zoo.

Reproduction and parenting edit

 
Infants are born with white fur and are always carried during the first months of their life.

The mantled guereza has a polygynous harem-based mating system.[14][21] Mating solicitations are made by both males and females, half of the time for each.[34] To solicit mating, the mantled guereza will walk near its potential partner and make low-intensity mouth clicks or tough-smacks.[35] During copulation, the males hold on the female's ankles and body.[36] Most matings take place between individuals of the same group but copulations outside of the group have been recorded.[36] In multi-male groups, more than one male may mate with the females.[22] The gestation period lasts 158 days with a 16–22 month interbirth interval.[18] The newborn guereza relies on its mother for support and must cling to her. As they grow older, infants can move on their own but keep returning to their mothers.[37] The infants take up most of the attention in the groups. The other females in a group may handle an infant although the latter are only comfortable with their mothers.[38] The males normally do not pay much attention to infants until they are four to five weeks old.[37] Infants can eat solid food at about eight to nine weeks and by fifty weeks they are fully weaned and no longer need to hold on to their mothers.[38]

Communication edit

The most notable vocalization of the mantled guereza is the "roar", which is made mainly at night or dawn by males. The sound of a roar can be carried for up to a mile. It is normally the dominant male who roars when there are multiple males in the group. Roars are used for long-distance communication and can regulate inter-group spacing without direct, physical contact while foraging.[39] When one male starts roaring, neighboring males will start to roar as well.[36] Often, the mantled guereza will respond to calls regardless of "caller identity," focusing more on the collective vocal displays and not the familiarity of the caller.[39] There is variation in the roars of males which could signal the status of their group and fighting ability.[36] With a roar, a male can advertise his body size; both actual and exaggerated.[40] Other vocalizations are made as well. Males may snort, possibly as an alarm call. "Purrs" are made before group movements. Females and infants may "caw" when under mild distress. When in more serious distress, like if an infant is in danger, females and sub-adults will squeak or scream. "Tongue-clicking" is made during mild aggression.[41] In addition to vocalizations, the mantled guereza communicates with several different body postures and movements, displaying of fringe fur, facial expressions, and touches.[38]

Conservation status edit

 
The mantled guereza is hunted for its skin and meat.

Because it can live in both dry and gallery forests and move on the ground, the mantled guereza is less threatened than many other colobine species.[42] The IUCN lists it as Least Concern because "although locally threatened in parts of its range, this widespread species is not thought to be declining fast enough to place it in a higher category of threat."[2] However, some of the subspecies are classified under different categories. The Mt Uaraguess guereza, C. g. percivali, is listed as Endangered due to its small range and its risk from hunting,[43] while the Dodinga Hills guereza, C. g. dodingae, the Djaffa Mountains guereza, C. g. gallarum, and the Mau Forest guereza, C. g. matschiei are all listed as Data Deficient.[44][45][46]

The Dodinga Hills guereza has not been recorded since the 1960s.[44] Unlike most other primate species, the mantled guereza can survive habitat degradation and can even thrive in degraded forests.[47] Sometimes, logging may increase the number of preferred food trees for the mantled guereza and it is more abundant in logged areas than unlogged ones.[42] However, complete forest clearance causes dramatic declines in numbers. In Uganda complete forest clearings caused a decline of 50% over eight years.[48] The mantled guereza is also threatened by hunting for meat and its skin. Mantled guereza meat sells as bushmeat for $4–9 US.[49] The skins have been sold for fashion or in the tourist trade.[50]

References edit

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  50. ^ Oates, J. F. (1977c). "The guereza and man". In Rainier III, Prince of Monaco; Bourne, G. H. (eds.). Primate Conservation. New York: Academic Press. pp. 419–467. ISBN 978-0-12-576150-5.

Cited sources edit

  • Davies, A. G.; Oates, J. F., eds. (1994). Colobine Monkeys: Their Ecology, Behaviour and Evolution. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521331531.
    • Oates, J. F.; Davies, A. G.; Delson, E. (1994). The diversity of living colobines. pp. 45–73.
    • Oates (1994a). The natural history of African colobines. pp. 75–128.
    • Oates, J. F. (1994b). Conclusions: the past, present and future of the colobines. pp. 347–358.

External links edit

  • Primate Info Net Colobus guereza Factsheet
  • ARKive – Images and movies of the Eastern black-and-white colobus (Colobus guereza)

mantled, guereza, mantled, guereza, colobus, guereza, also, known, simply, guereza, eastern, black, white, colobus, abyssinian, black, white, colobus, black, white, colobus, type, world, monkey, native, much, west, central, east, africa, including, cameroon, e. The mantled guereza Colobus guereza also known simply as the guereza the eastern black and white colobus or the Abyssinian black and white colobus is a black and white colobus a type of Old World monkey It is native to much of west central and east Africa including Cameroon Equatorial Guinea Nigeria Ethiopia Kenya Tanzania Uganda and Chad The species consists of several subspecies that differ in appearance It has a distinctive appearance which is alluded to in its name the long white fringes of hair that run along each side of its black trunk are known as a mantle Its face is framed with white hair and it has a large white tail tuft Mantled guereza 1 Male at the Henry Doorly Zoo Female with infant at Munster Zoo Conservation status Least Concern IUCN 3 1 2 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia Order Primates Suborder Haplorhini Infraorder Simiiformes Family Cercopithecidae Genus Colobus Species C guereza Binomial name Colobus guerezaRuppell 1835 Mantled guereza range The mantled guereza is diurnal and arboreal found in both deciduous and evergreen forests It is an adaptable species that can cope with habitat disturbance and prefers secondary forest close to rivers or lakes Although previously thought to eat only leaves it also eats seeds fruits and arthropods It is able to digest plant material with a high fibre content with its specialised stomach and may only eat from a few plant species at a time It is preyed on by birds of prey and some mammals such as the common chimpanzee and the leopard The mantled guereza lives in social groups of three to fifteen individuals These groups normally include a dominant male several females and the offspring of the females It has a polygynous mating system and copulation is initiated with vocal communication After a gestation period of just over five months infants are born with pink skin and white fur which darkens to the adult coloration by three to four months The mantled guereza is well known for its dawn chorus the males roar is a method of long distance communication that reinforces territorial boundaries It also makes other vocalization and uses body postures movements and facial expressions to communicate The mantled guereza is listed as Least Concern by the International Union for Conservation of Nature IUCN because it is widespread although it is locally threatened in some areas the decline is not great enough to list it in a higher category of threat However one subspecies found in Kenya is listed as Endangered It can survive well in degraded forests and in some areas it is more common in logged areas than unlogged ones The mantled guereza is also threatened by hunting for bushmeat and for its skin Contents 1 Etymology 2 Taxonomic classification 3 Physical description 4 Distribution and habitat 5 Ecology 6 Behaviour 6 1 Social structure 6 2 Reproduction and parenting 6 3 Communication 7 Conservation status 8 References 9 Cited sources 10 External linksEtymology editThe mantled guereza has many alternative common names including the guereza the eastern black and white colobus the magistrate colobus 2 or the Abyssinian black and white colobus 3 The name mantled refers to its mantle the long silky white fringes of hair that run along its body and guereza is the native name of the monkey in Ethiopia 4 The scientific name Colobus derives from Greek kolobus meaning mutilated which refers to its lack of thumbs 5 Taxonomic classification editThe mantled guereza was first classified by Eduard Ruppell a German naturalist and explorer during his trip to Abyssinia between 1830 and 1834 6 He wrote about the species in Neue Wirbelthiere con Abyssinien Saengthiere in 1835 7 It was first seen in Europe in 1890 in Berlin Zoological Garden when three individuals were purchased from a dealer from Massawa Eritrea 8 nbsp Distribution map of subspecies of Mantled guereza The mantled guereza is in the Colobinae subfamily also known as the leaf eating monkeys a group of Old World monkeys from Asia and Africa This subfamily is split into three groups the colobus monkeys of Africa of which the mantled guereza is a part the langurs or leaf monkeys of Asia and an odd nosed group The African colobus monkeys are divided again by distinctions in color behavior and ecology The three genera are the black and white colobi the red colobi and the olive colobi There are three black and white colobi the mantled guereza Colobus guereza the king colobus C polykomos and the Angola colobus C angolensis 9 Groves lists seven subspecies of mantled guereza in Mammal Species of the World MSW 2005 1 The validity of the Djaffa Mountain guereza C g gallarum is uncertain although not listed by Groves in MSW it is recognised in his 2007 Colobinae review paper 10 and by International Union for Conservation of Nature IUCN assessors Gippolliti and Butynski in 2008 2 Western guereza Colobus guereza occidentalis occurs from eastern Nigeria Cameroon and Gabon at the edge of its western range to South Sudan and Uganda west of the Nile Omo River guereza or Abyssinian black and white colobus C g guereza found in Ethiopia in the highlands west of the Rift Valley down to the reaches of the Awash River the Omo River and in the Blue Nile gorge Djaffa Mountains guereza or Neumann s black and white colobus C g gallarum found in the Ethiopian Highlands east of the Rift Valley Dodinga Hills guereza C g dodingae found in the Didinga Hills in South Sudan Mau Forest guereza C g matschiei occurs from western Kenya and Uganda south into northern Tanzania Mt Uaraguess guereza or Percival s black and white colobus C g percivali found in the Matthews Range in Kenya Eastern black and white colobus C g kikuyuensis occurs in Kenya on the Ngong Escarpment of Mount Kenya and in the Aberdare Range Kilimanjaro guereza C g caudatus found in Tanzania and Kenya in the forests surrounding Mount Kilimanjaro and Mount Meru The morphological difference between subspecies is most pronounced between the southeastern Kilimanjaro guereza C g caudatus and the northwestern western guereza C g occidentalis The intermediate subspecies show a gradual change between the two 10 nbsp C g occidentalisAt the Semliki Wildlife Reserve in Uganda nbsp C g occidentalis with juvenileAt the Semliki Wildlife Reserve in Uganda nbsp C g matschiei with juvenileAt the Lake Naivasha in Kenya nbsp C g matschieiAt the Lake Naivasha in Kenya nbsp male C g guerezaAt the Amora Gedel Park in Awassa Ethiopia nbsp male C g guerezaAt the Amora Gedel Park in Awassa Ethiopia nbsp juvenile female C g guerezaAt the Amora Gedel Park in Awassa EthiopiaPhysical description edit nbsp A skull at the Museum Wiesbaden in Wiesbaden Germany The mantled guereza has a distinctive pelage which is mostly black with long white fringes of silky hair known as a mantle or ornamentation along the sides of its body and tail The bands that make up the mantle start at the shoulders and extend along the back until they connect at the lower torso The tail is long and ends in a white tuft which varies in how much it covers the tail These features vary in color among subspecies for example the tail of C g guereza is gray until the white tail tuft which covers half of its length while the tail tuft of C g caudatus makes up 80 of the tail The mantle color ranges from white to cream or yellow Its face is framed by white hair and it has bushy cheek hairs The thigh has a white stripe 11 Infants are born with pink skin and white hair The hair and skin darken as they age and by three to four months they attain adult coloration Male usually gain their coloration before females 12 The male typically weighs 9 3 and 13 5 kilograms 21 and 30 lb and the female weighs between 7 8 and 9 2 kilograms 17 and 20 lb The head and body length averages 61 5 centimetres 24 2 in for males and 57 6 centimetres 22 7 in for females Like most colobi the mantled guereza has a small thumb that is vestigial 13 14 There is dentition sexual dimorphism among the subspecies In some the males have larger teeth than females in others the reverse is true and some have no significant difference 15 Distribution and habitat edit nbsp Mantled guerezas are arboreal and prefer secondary forests The mantled guereza is distributed throughout Equatorial Africa It ranges from Nigeria and Cameroon in the west to Ethiopia Kenya Uganda and northern Tanzania in the east 11 13 The mantled guereza lives in both deciduous and evergreen forests It mainly inhabits forest and savannah woodlands and often extend into highland and montane forests 16 It can be found in other forest habitats both primary and secondary such as riparian near fresh or brackish water gallery and upland forests It is particularly common in forests close to rivers and lakes and at high elevations 17 It can be found in elevations as high as 3 300 metres 10 800 ft 18 This species prefers secondary forests and selects them over old growth forests if given the choice 19 It is likely that the mantled guereza prefers these forests due to the increased number of food trees and the weaker chemical defenses of the species within 19 The mantled guereza is sometimes found in swamps 20 as well as human made habitats such as Eucalyptus plantations which may be frequented when the monkey has nutritional deficiencies 18 Ecology editThe mantled guereza is primarily arboreal but does sometimes descend on the ground to forage and travel perhaps more so than most other colobines It is diurnal and rests for up to half the day Foraging or travelling are the next most common activity Sometime after dawn mantled guereza groups leave their sleeping trees and will return to them at dusk During the day the mantled guereza has long rest periods in between periods of moving and feeding 21 22 23 Other activities including grooming greeting playing and being vigilant are performed to a lesser extent 22 23 nbsp The diet of the mantled guereza is predominantly leaves often of only a few tree species Despite its reputation as an exclusive leaf eater the mantled guereza is not an obligate folivore 14 While it mainly eats leaves and fruit its diet is quite variable It may eat bark wood seeds flowers petioles lianas aquatic plants arthropods soil and even concrete from buildings 24 The amount of each food item in its diet varies by area and time of year Nutritional factors like protein tannins and sodium levels in leaves influence its food choices It may even intermittently travel longer distances to access plants with higher levels of nutrition 25 Leaves usually make up over half of its diet although fruits are occasionally eaten more depending on the season 14 18 When foraging for leaves the mantled guereza prefers young ones over old 19 With fleshy fruits the mantled guereza prefers to eat them unripe which may serve to reduce competition with primates that eat ripe fruits 24 It consumes a number of plant species but only some make up most of its diet at a specific site 20 24 Like all colobi the mantled guereza is able to digest leaves and other plant fibers with a large multi chambered stomach that contains bacteria in certain areas 26 Like most colobines it prefers foods with high fiber content that can be easily extracted with its specialized stomach 25 The mantled guereza is mostly preyed on by the crowned hawk eagle 27 but it is also eaten by other birds of prey such as Verreaux s eagle 18 The common chimpanzee is known to hunt the guereza 28 The leopard is another possible predator 29 Behaviour editSocial structure edit nbsp Social grooming or allogrooming mainly occurs between females and is an important social interaction in mantled guereza groups The mantled guereza lives in stable social groups usually containing three to fifteen members 22 The groups usually contain one male several females and juveniles In some populations groups containing several males are common 30 In multi male groups males tend to be aggressive with one another with one being dominant Some males may be expelled from these groups 21 Multi male groups may contain father son pairs or unrelated males 31 Males that are not part of groups either live solitarily or with other outside males in bachelor groups The females keep the groups cohesive and they are matrilineally related They rarely disperse from their natal groups except possibly when they break apart 21 Males on the other hand usually leave when they become subadults or adults They may start out being solitary and or in bachelor groups They gain entry into a social group either by being on the periphery or displacing a group male 18 Because of its low quality diet and the dispersed distribution of its food the mantled guereza has a resident egalitarian social structure Female guerezas living in a group often have an egalitarian dominance style with no formalized rank relations Relationships are relaxed and friendly with rare signals of dominance or subordinance Physical aggression within the group is usually not harmful and rarely escalates into a conflict Allogrooming is an important part of mantled guereza interactions and mostly occurs between females 32 The adult males rarely groom in the groups While not strictly territorial mantled guereza groups can be aggressive towards each other 22 In some populations groups may defend core areas which exist as a small part of the home range resources and mates During intergroup encounters males can engage in direct or indirect mate defense like defending a female s resources 33 It is the males that participate in agonistic inter group encounters but female may do so as well 22 Aggressive encounters between groups usually involve chases displays and vocalizations rather than physical contact 22 source source source source source source source Two Mantled guereza in a Japanese zoo Reproduction and parenting edit nbsp Infants are born with white fur and are always carried during the first months of their life The mantled guereza has a polygynous harem based mating system 14 21 Mating solicitations are made by both males and females half of the time for each 34 To solicit mating the mantled guereza will walk near its potential partner and make low intensity mouth clicks or tough smacks 35 During copulation the males hold on the female s ankles and body 36 Most matings take place between individuals of the same group but copulations outside of the group have been recorded 36 In multi male groups more than one male may mate with the females 22 The gestation period lasts 158 days with a 16 22 month interbirth interval 18 The newborn guereza relies on its mother for support and must cling to her As they grow older infants can move on their own but keep returning to their mothers 37 The infants take up most of the attention in the groups The other females in a group may handle an infant although the latter are only comfortable with their mothers 38 The males normally do not pay much attention to infants until they are four to five weeks old 37 Infants can eat solid food at about eight to nine weeks and by fifty weeks they are fully weaned and no longer need to hold on to their mothers 38 Communication edit The most notable vocalization of the mantled guereza is the roar which is made mainly at night or dawn by males The sound of a roar can be carried for up to a mile It is normally the dominant male who roars when there are multiple males in the group Roars are used for long distance communication and can regulate inter group spacing without direct physical contact while foraging 39 When one male starts roaring neighboring males will start to roar as well 36 Often the mantled guereza will respond to calls regardless of caller identity focusing more on the collective vocal displays and not the familiarity of the caller 39 There is variation in the roars of males which could signal the status of their group and fighting ability 36 With a roar a male can advertise his body size both actual and exaggerated 40 Other vocalizations are made as well Males may snort possibly as an alarm call Purrs are made before group movements Females and infants may caw when under mild distress When in more serious distress like if an infant is in danger females and sub adults will squeak or scream Tongue clicking is made during mild aggression 41 In addition to vocalizations the mantled guereza communicates with several different body postures and movements displaying of fringe fur facial expressions and touches 38 Conservation status edit nbsp The mantled guereza is hunted for its skin and meat Because it can live in both dry and gallery forests and move on the ground the mantled guereza is less threatened than many other colobine species 42 The IUCN lists it as Least Concern because although locally threatened in parts of its range this widespread species is not thought to be declining fast enough to place it in a higher category of threat 2 However some of the subspecies are classified under different categories The Mt Uaraguess guereza C g percivali is listed as Endangered due to its small range and its risk from hunting 43 while the Dodinga Hills guereza C g dodingae the Djaffa Mountains guereza C g gallarum and the Mau Forest guereza C g matschiei are all listed as Data Deficient 44 45 46 The Dodinga Hills guereza has not been recorded since the 1960s 44 Unlike most other primate species the mantled guereza can survive habitat degradation and can even thrive in degraded forests 47 Sometimes logging may increase the number of preferred food trees for the mantled guereza and it is more abundant in logged areas than unlogged ones 42 However complete forest clearance causes dramatic declines in numbers In Uganda complete forest clearings caused a decline of 50 over eight years 48 The mantled guereza is also threatened by hunting for meat and its skin Mantled guereza meat sells as bushmeat for 4 9 US 49 The skins have been sold for fashion or in the tourist trade 50 References edit a b Groves C P 2005 Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press p 168 ISBN 0 801 88221 4 OCLC 62265494 a b c d de Jong Y A Butynski T M Oates J F 2019 Colobus guereza IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T5143A17944705 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 3 RLTS T5143A17944705 en Retrieved 11 November 2021 Wolfheim J H 1983 Primates Of The World Distribution Abundance And Conservation Routledge ISBN 978 3 7186 0190 5 Guereza Merriam Webster dictionary Merriam Webster Retrieved 2 April 2013 Grzimek B 1972 Grzimek s Animal Life Encyclopedia Mammals I IV Vol 10 Van Nostrand Reinhold Co p 464 Beolens B Watkins M Grayson M 2009 The Eponym Dictionary of Mammals JHU Press p 353 ISBN 978 0 8018 9533 3 A Catalogue of the Mammalia in the Museum of the Hon East India Company Google eBook Allen 1851 p 16 Heck L 1892 Two rare monkeys The Popular Science Monthly 41 22 Bonnier Corporation 393 ISSN 0161 7370 Fleagle J G 1998 Primate Adaptation and Evolution 2nd ed Academic Press pp 207 209 ISBN 978 0 12 260341 9 a b Groves C 2007 The taxonomic diversity of the Colobinae of Africa PDF Journal of Anthropological Sciences 85 7 34 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 04 19 a b Groves C 2001 Primate Taxonomy Washington DC Smithsonian Institution Press Ackerman D E 1991 A study of the colobus monkey Colobus guereza kikuyuensis Animal Keeper s Forum 18 4 164 171 a b Napier P H 1985 Catalogue of Primates in the British Museum Natural History and Elsewhere in the British Isles part III Family Cercopithecidae Subfamily Colobinae London British Museum Natural History a b c d Davies amp Oates 1994 Hayes V J Freedman L Oxnard C E 1995 The differential expression of dental sexual dimorphism in subspecies of Colobus guereza International Journal of Primatology 16 6 971 996 doi 10 1007 bf02696112 S2CID 23753155 Oates 1994a pp 75 128 Dunbar R I M 1987 Habitat quality population dynamics and group composition in colobus monkeys Colobus guereza International Journal of Primatology 8 4 299 329 doi 10 1007 bf02737386 S2CID 2006267 a b c d e f Dunbar R I M Dunbar E P 1974 Ecology and population dynamics of Colobus guereza in Ethiopia Folia Primatologica 21 3 4 188 208 doi 10 1159 000155600 PMID 4214737 a b c Lwanga J S 2006 Spatial distribution of primates in a mosaic of colonizing and old growth forest at Ngogo Kibale National Park Uganda Primates 47 3 230 238 doi 10 1007 s10329 005 0173 5 PMID 16479411 S2CID 8734069 a b Oates J F 1978 Water plant and soil consumption by guereza monkeys Colobus guereza a relationship with minerals and toxins in the diet Biotropica 10 4 241 253 doi 10 2307 2387676 JSTOR 2387676 a b c d Bocian C M 1997 Niche separation of black and white colobus monkeys Colobus angolensisandC guereza in the Ituri Forest Ph D City University of New York a b c d e f g von Hippel F A 1996 Interactions between overlapping multimale groups of black and white colobus monkeys Colobus guereza in the Kakamega Forest Kenya American Journal of Primatology 38 3 193 209 doi 10 1002 SICI 1098 2345 1996 38 3 lt 193 AID AJP1 gt 3 0 CO 2 U PMID 31918478 S2CID 210133123 a b Oates J F 1977a The guereza and its food In Clutton Brock T H ed Primate Ecology Studies of Feeding and Ranging Behaviour in Lemurs Monkeys and Apes London Academic Press pp 275 321 a b c Harris T R Chapman C A 2007 Variation in diet and ranging of black and white colobus monkeys in Kibale National Park Uganda PDF Primates 48 3 208 221 doi 10 1007 s10329 006 0036 8 PMID 17429575 S2CID 6986510 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 05 Retrieved 2015 09 02 a b Fashing P J Dierenfeld E S Mowry C B 2007 Influence of plant and soil chemistry on food selection ranging patterns and biomass of Colobus guereza in Kakamega Forest Kenya PDF International Journal of Primatology 28 3 673 doi 10 1007 s10764 006 9096 2 S2CID 25984104 Oates Davies amp Delson 1994 pp 45 73 Struhsaker T T Leakey M 1990 Prey selectivity by crowned hawk eagles on monkeys in the Kibale Forest Uganda Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 26 6 435 443 doi 10 1007 bf00170902 S2CID 21024373 Ihobe H 2001 Hunting attempt by chimpanzees on Abyssinian colobus at the Kalinzu Forest Uganda Pan Africa News 8 2 31 32 doi 10 5134 143397 Schel A M Tranquilli S Zuberbuhler K 2009 The alarm call system of two species of black and white colobus monkeys Colobus polykomos and Colobus guereza PDF Journal of Comparative Psychology 123 2 136 150 doi 10 1037 a0014280 PMID 19450021 Dunbar R I M 1976 Contrasts in social structure among black and white colobus monkey groups Animal Behaviour 24 1 84 92 doi 10 1016 s0003 3472 76 80102 9 PMID 817624 S2CID 20145070 Harris T R Caillaud D Chapman C A Vigilant L 2009 Neither genetic nor observational data alone are sufficient for understanding sex biased dispersal in a social group living species Molecular Ecology 18 8 1777 1790 doi 10 1111 j 1365 294x 2009 04139 x PMID 19302351 S2CID 26345361 Grunau T Kuester J 2001 Dominance style in female guerezas Colobus guereza Ruppell 1835 Primates 42 4 301 doi 10 1007 BF02629621 S2CID 43214796 Fashing P 2001 Male and female strategies during intergroup encounters in guerezas Colobus guereza Evidence for resource defense mediated through males and a comparison with other primates PDF Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 50 3 219 230 doi 10 1007 s002650100358 S2CID 12964572 Harris T R Monfort S L 2006 Mating behavior and endocrine profiles of wild black and white colobus monkeys Colobus guereza Toward an understanding of their life history and mating system American Journal of Primatology 68 4 383 396 doi 10 1002 ajp 20232 PMID 16534807 S2CID 7198092 Grimes K H 2000 Guereza dietary and behavioural patterns at the Entebbe Botanical Gardens M A University of Calgary a b c d Harris T R 2005 Roaring intergroup aggression and feeding competition in black and white colobus monkeys Colobus guereza at Kanyawara Kibale National Park Uganda Ph D thesis Yale University a b Horwich R H Manski D 1975 Maternal care and infant transfer in two species of Colobus monkeys PDF Primates 16 49 73 doi 10 1007 BF02381799 S2CID 45582808 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 23 Retrieved 2015 09 02 a b c Oates J F 1977 The social life of a black and white colobus monkey Colobus guereza Zeitschrift fur Tierpsychologie 45 1 1 60 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0310 1977 tb01007 x PMID 414475 a b Schel A M Zuberbuhler K 2011 Dawn chorusing in guereza colobus monkeys Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 66 3 361 doi 10 1007 s00265 011 1282 3 S2CID 7149453 Harris T R Fitch W T Goldstein L M Fashing P J 2006 Black and white colobus monkey Colobus guereza roars as a source of both honest and exaggerated information about body mass PDF Ethology 112 9 911 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0310 2006 01247 x Marler P 1972 Vocalizations of East African monkeys II black and white colobus Behaviour 42 3 175 197 doi 10 1163 156853972X00266 a b Oates 1994b pp 347 358 Mwenja I 2019 Colobus guereza ssp percivali IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T40007A17983118 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 3 RLTS T40007A17983118 en Retrieved 11 November 2021 a b Butynski T M de Jong Y A 2020 Colobus guereza ssp dodingae IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T136880A17983306 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 2 RLTS T136880A17983306 en Retrieved 11 November 2021 Fashing P J Oates J F 2019 Colobus guereza ssp gallarum IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T5150A17983175 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 3 RLTS T5150A17983175 en Retrieved 11 November 2021 Butynski T M de Jong Y A 2020 Colobus guereza ssp matschiei IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T136846A176219904 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 3 RLTS T136846A176219904 en Retrieved 11 November 2021 Chapman C A Balcomb S R Gillespie T R Skorupa J P Struhsaker T T 2000 Long term effects of logging on African primate communities A 28 year comparison from Kibale National Park Uganda PDF Conservation Biology 14 207 217 doi 10 1046 j 1523 1739 2000 98592 x S2CID 6827577 Archived from the original PDF on 2021 03 03 Retrieved 2015 09 04 Chapman C A Naughton Treves L Lawes M J Wasserman M D Gillespie T R 2007 Population declines of Colobus in western Uganda and conservation value of forest fragments PDF International Journal of Primatology 28 3 513 doi 10 1007 s10764 007 9142 8 S2CID 20186034 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 02 22 Retrieved 2015 09 02 Eves H E Ruggiero R G 2000 Socioeconomics and the sustainability of hunting in the forests of northern Congo Brazzaville In Robinson J G Bennett E L eds Hunting for Sustainability in Tropical Forests New York Columbia University Press pp 427 454 ISBN 978 0 231 50492 8 Oates J F 1977c The guereza and man In Rainier III Prince of Monaco Bourne G H eds Primate Conservation New York Academic Press pp 419 467 ISBN 978 0 12 576150 5 Cited sources editDavies A G Oates J F eds 1994 Colobine Monkeys Their Ecology Behaviour and Evolution Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521331531 Oates J F Davies A G Delson E 1994 The diversity of living colobines pp 45 73 Oates 1994a The natural history of African colobines pp 75 128 Oates J F 1994b Conclusions the past present and future of the colobines pp 347 358 External links edit nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Mantled guereza nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mantled guereza Primate Info Net Colobus guereza Factsheet ARKive Images and movies of the Eastern black and white colobus Colobus guereza Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mantled guereza amp oldid 1207212126, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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