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Vervet monkey

The vervet monkey (Chlorocebus pygerythrus), or simply vervet, is an Old World monkey of the family Cercopithecidae native to Africa.[3] The term "vervet" is also used to refer to all the members of the genus Chlorocebus. The five distinct subspecies can be found mostly throughout Southern Africa, as well as some of the eastern countries. These mostly herbivorous monkeys have black faces and grey body hair color, ranging in body length from about 40 cm (16 in) for females, to about 50 cm (20 in) for males.

Vervet monkey[1]
Adult vervet monkey
Calls recorded at Lake Naivasha, Kenya
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Primates
Suborder: Haplorhini
Infraorder: Simiiformes
Family: Cercopithecidae
Genus: Chlorocebus
Species:
C. pygerythrus
Binomial name
Chlorocebus pygerythrus
F. Cuvier, 1821
     Native Range

In addition to behavioral research on natural populations, vervet monkeys serve as a nonhuman primate model for understanding genetic and social behaviors of humans. They have been noted for having human-like characteristics, such as hypertension, anxiety, and social and dependent alcohol use.[4] Vervets live in social groups ranging from 10 to 70 individuals, with males moving to other groups at the time of sexual maturity. Studies done on vervet monkeys involve their communication and alarm calls, specifically in regard to kin and group recognition, and particular predator sightings.

Taxonomy Edit

The vervet monkey was previously classified as Cercopithecus aethiops, now renamed 'grivet', and reclassified as Chlorocebus. The vervet and malbrouck have also been considered conspecific, or as subspecies of a widespread Ch. aethiops.[5] The different taxa are distinguished by coat colour and other morphological characteristics. The characteristics of Ch. aethiops graduate into Ch. pygerythrus where their ranges meet, and thus deciding if the vervets commonly known to occur in Kenya are actually Ch. aethiops is difficult; animals in the same pack may be classified as one species or the other, and Ch. pygerythrus may also interbreed with Ch. tantalus where their ranges meet.[6]

Colin Groves recognised the below five subspecies of vervet monkey in the third edition of Mammals of the World:[1]

Groves used Ch. p. hilgerti for all East African vervets except the insular subspecies Ch. p. excubitor and Ch. p. nesiotes. The name Ch. p. centralis has been suggested to have precedence, and that Ch. p. hilgerti should be restricted to the population of southern Ethiopia.[10]

Synonymy Edit

Ch. p. pygerythrus, as Cercopithecus aethiops, was also formerly divided into four subspecies:

  • C. a. pygerythrus, from South Africa (Western Cape, Eastern Cape, Northern Cape and southern KwaZulu-Natal), and Lesotho; is said to have pale-colored limbs and white hands and feet (though the hands are also said to be black with a scattering of greyish hairs),[9] and a greyish body colour with an olive sheen.[8]
  • C. a. cloetei, from northern KwaZulu-Natal, Eswatini, and northern South Africa; is darker, with greyish-brown speckles and dark feet.[8]
  • C. a. marjoriae, from southern Botswana and the North West Province of South Africa; is pale in colour (light ash-grey).[8]
  • C. a. ngamiensis,[11] from north-eastern Botswana and the Okavango; has pale feet and a yellowish back[8] and the tail is darker (especially towards the tip) than in other southern vervets.[9]

These subspecies are no longer recognised and are synonymous with Ch. p. pygerythrus.

Distribution and habitat Edit

Natural habitat Edit

The vervet monkey ranges throughout much of Southern and East Africa, being found from Ethiopia and extreme southern South Sudan all the way down to South Africa. It is not found west of the East African Rift or the Luangwa River,[1] where it is replaced by the closely related malbrouck (C. cynosuros) species. The vervet monkey inhabits savanna, riverine woodland, coastal forest, and mountains up to 4000 m (13,100 ft). They are adaptable and able to persist in secondary and/or highly fragmented vegetation, including cultivated areas, and sometimes are found living in both rural and urban environments.[2] Annual home range size has been observed to be as high as 176 ha, with an average population density of 54.68 animals/km².

Introduced Edit

Vervet monkeys that are naturalised (introduced by humans) are found in Cape Verde, Ascension Island, Saint Helena, St Kitts and Nevis, and Barbados.[12] Dania Beach, Florida, is home to about 40 introduced vervets.[13][14]

Physical description Edit

The vervet monkey very much resembles a gray langur, having a black face with a white fringe of hair, while its overall hair color is mostly grizzled-grey.[15][16] The species exhibits sexual dimorphism; the males are larger in weight and body length and may be recognized by a turquoise-blue scrotum. Adult males weigh between 3.9 and 8.0 kg (8.6 and 17.6 lb), averaging 5.5 kg (12 lb), and have a body length between 420 and 600 mm (17 and 24 in), averaging 490 mm (19 in) from the top of the head to the base of the tail. Adult females weigh between 3.4 and 5.3 kg (7.5 and 11.7 lb) and average 4.1 kg (9.0 lb), and measure between 300 and 495 mm (11.8 and 19.5 in), averaging 426 mm (16.8 in).[9][17]

Behaviour Edit

Social behaviour Edit

 
A vervet monkey grooms another in Gaborone, Botswana
 
Juvenile C. p. rufoviridis, Uganda

When males reach sexual maturity, they move to a neighboring group.[18] Often, males move with a brother or peer, presumably for protection against aggression by males and females of the resident group. Groups that had previously transferred males show significantly less aggression upon the arrival of another male. In almost every case, males migrate to adjacent groups. This obviously increases benefits in regard to distance traveled, but also reduces the amount of genetic variance, increasing the likelihood of inbreeding.[19]

Females remain in their groups throughout life. Separate dominance hierarchies are found for each sex. Male hierarchies are determined by age, tenure in the group, fighting abilities, and allies, while female hierarchies are dependent on maternal social status. A large proportion of interactions occurs between individuals that are similarly ranked and closely related. Between unrelated individuals, female competition exists for grooming members of high-ranking families, presumably to gain more access to resources. These observations suggest individual recognition is possible and enables discrimination of genetic relatedness and social status. Interactions between different groups are variable, ranging from highly aggressive to friendly. Furthermore, individuals seem to be able to recognise cross-group vocalisations, and identify from and to which monkey each call is intended, even if the call is made by a subadult male, which is likely to transfer groups. This suggests the members within a group are actively monitoring the activity of other groups, including the movement of individuals within a group.[20]

Within groups, aggression is directed primarily at individuals that are lower on the hierarchy. Once an individual is three years or older, it is considerably more likely to be involved in conflict. Conflict often arises when one group member shows aggression toward a close relative of another. Further, both males and females may redirect aggression towards individuals in which both had close relatives that were previously involved in a conflict. This suggests complex recognition not only of individuals, but also of associations between individuals. This does not suggest recognition of other's individual kinship bonds is possible, but rather that discrimination of social relationships does occur.[21]

 
Female and juvenile, Kruger Park, South Africa

Alarm calls and offspring recognition Edit

Vervet monkeys have four confirmed predators: leopards, eagles, pythons, and baboons. The sighting of each predator elicits an acoustically distinct alarm call.[22] As infants, vervets learn to make the variety of calls from observation alone, without explicit tutelage. In experimentation with unreliable signalers, individuals became habituated to incorrect calls from a specific individual. Though the response was lessened for a specific predator, if an unreliable individual gives an alarm call for a different predator, group members respond as if the alarm caller is, in fact, reliable. This suggests vervet monkeys are able to recognize and to respond to not only the individual calling, but also to the semantics of what the individual is communicating.[23] Vervet monkeys are thought to have up to 30 different alarm calls. In the wild, they have been seen giving a different call when seeing a human being approaching, leading researchers to believe that vervet monkeys may have a way of distinguishing between different land and flight predators.[24]

Mothers can recognise their offspring by a scream alone. A juvenile scream elicits a reaction from all mothers, yet the juvenile's own mother has a shorter latency in looking in the direction of the scream, as well as an increased duration in her look. Further, mothers have been observed to help their offspring in conflict, yet rarely aid other juveniles. Other mothers evidently can determine to which mother the offspring belongs. Individuals have been observed to look towards the mother whose offspring is creating the scream.[25]

Kin relationships Edit

Siblings likely provide the prevailing social relationships during development. Within social groups, mother-offspring and sibling interactive units are distinct groups. The sibling interactions are heavily supportive and friendly, but do have some competition. Contests primarily involve postweaning resource allocation by the common mother. For example, siblings have conflict over grooming time allocated by their mother. Offspring are usually not born in extremely close time proximity due to the interbirth period of the mother. This time can be reduced by use of an allomother. The clarity of the familial and sibships within a group may act as a form of alliance, which would come at relatively low cost in regards to grooming. Other alliances are shown through conflict with aggressive individuals that have acted against a closely related sibling.[26]

 
Vervet monkey female with a baby

Allomothering is the process when another individual besides the mother cares for an infant. In groups of vervet monkeys, infants are the target of a tremendous amount of attention. Days after an infant is born, every member of the group inspects the infant at least once by touching or sniffing. While all group members participate in infant caretaking, juvenile females that cannot yet menstruate are responsible for the majority of allomothering. The benefit is mutual for the mother and allomother. Mothers that use allomothers are able to shorten their interbirth periods, the time between successive births. At the same time, allomothers gain experience in rearing infants, and had more success in raising their own offspring. Juvenile females discriminate in preference for the infant they choose to allomother, and usually choose siblings or infants of high-ranking individuals. When a mother allows her juvenile daughter to become an allomother for a newborn sibling, the mother decreases her own investment in the infant, while increasing the chances of successful rearing of her immature daughter.[27]

Grandmothers and grandchildren share one-quarter of their genes, so they should be more likely to form affiliative relationships than unrelated members in a group. Not only do infants approach their grandmothers more often than unrelated members, but they also prefer their grandmothers compared to other adult female kin, not including their own mothers. Additional research has shown grandmothers show no preference over the sex of their grandchild. Interest in the grandchild spurred from the rank of the grandmother within a group. Higher-ranking grandmothers showed more interest in caring for their grandchildren when compared to low-ranking grandmothers. The presence of grandmothers has been associated with a decrease in mortality of infants.[28]

Spite Edit

Spiteful actions are extremely rare in the animal kingdom. Often, an indirect benefit is gained by the individual acting 'spitefully', or by a close relative of that individual. Vervet monkeys have been observed to destroy a competitor's food source rather than consume or steal it themselves. While energy is being lost on destroying the food, an advantage is obtained by the individual due to an increase in competitive gain. This would be pertinent for a male that could be displaced within his group by immigrating males.[29]

Reproduction Edit

Female vervets do not have external signs indicating estrus, thus elaborate social behaviors involving reproduction do not occur. Typically, a female gives birth once a year, between September and February, after a gestation period around 165 days. Usually, only one infant is born at a time, though twins can occur rarely. A normal infant weighs 300–400 grams (11–14 oz).[9]

Ecology Edit

Diet Edit

The vervet monkey eats a primarily herbivorous diet, living mostly on wild fruits, flowers, leaves, seeds, and seed pods. In agricultural areas, vervets become problem animals, as they raid bean, pea, young tobacco, vegetable, fruit, and grain crops. Animal foods of their diet include grasshoppers and termites. Raids of cattle egrets and weaver bird nests have been observed where the vervets eat the eggs and chicks.[9]

A list of some natural food plants and part of the plant eaten, in South Africa:[9][30]

Relationship with humans Edit

 
An infant vervet monkey, South Africa

The monkeys are used for biomedical research.[31] Many people living in close proximity to vervet colonies see them as pests, as they steal their food. Heavy fines in some areas discourage the killing of vervet monkeys.[32]

Its status according to the IUCN is "least concern".

This species was known in ancient Egypt, including the Red Sea Mountains and the Nile Valley.[33] From fresco artworks found in Akrotiri on the Mediterranean island of Santorini there is evidence that the vervet monkey was known to the inhabitants of this settlement around 2000 BC; this fact is most noted for evidence of early contact between Egypt and Akrotiri.[34] Excavations dated to the end of the 1st century AD from Berenike, a Roman-Egyptian port-town on the Red Sea coast, demonstrate that vervet monkeys must have been kept as pets at that time.[35]

Gallery Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Groves, C. P. (2005). "Chlorocebus pygerythrus". In 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. 159. ISBN 0-801-88221-4. OCLC 62265494.
  2. ^ a b Butynski, T.M.; de Jong, Y.A. (2019). "Chlorocebus pygerythrus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2019: e.T136271A17957823. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2019-3.RLTS.T136271A17957823.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Vervet Monkey (Chlorocebus pygerythrus)". iNaturalist. Retrieved 6 June 2023.
  4. ^ Palmour, R.; Mulligan, J.; Howbert, J. J.; Ervin, F. (1997). "Of monkeys and men: vervets and the genetics of human-like behaviors". American Journal of Human Genetics. 61 (3): 481–488. doi:10.1086/515526. PMC 1715973. PMID 9326311.
  5. ^ Kingdon, J. (1997). The Kingdom Guide to African Mammals. Academic Press Limited, London. ISBN 0-12-408355-2.
  6. ^ de Jong, Y.; Butynski, T. (14 January 2015). "A rainbow of savanna monkeys". National Geographic Society Newsroom. National Geographic. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  7. ^ a b c Biodiversity occurrence data provided by: Field Museum of Natural History, Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of Washington Burke Museum, and University of Turku (Accessed through GBIF Data Portal, www.gbif.net, 2010-06-18)
  8. ^ a b c d e Cillié, B. (1992). Pocket guide to southern African mammals. Van Schaik Publishers. ISBN 0-627-01686-3.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Skinner, J.D. & Smithers, R.H.N. (1990). The mammals of the southern African subregion (2nd ed.). Pretoria (South Africa): University of Pretoria. p. 771. ISBN 0-86979-802-2.
  10. ^ Gippoliti, S. (December 2018). "The name of the East African vervet monkey (genus Chlorocebus Gray, 1870) (Primates, Cercopithecidae)". Doriana. Genoa. 9 (404). ISSN 0417-9927.
  11. ^ Meester, J. A. J., I. L. Rautenbach, N. J. Dippenaar, and C. M. Baker. 1986. Classification of southern African mammals. Transvaal Museum Monographs 5:1–359
  12. ^ McGuire, M. T. (June 1974). "The history of the St. Kitts vervet". Caribbean Quarterly. 20 (2): 37–52. doi:10.1080/00086495.1974.11829225. ISSN 0008-6495.
  13. ^ "Scientist concerned about vervet monkeys missing from Dania Beach colony". 11 February 2020.
  14. ^ Long, J. L. (2003). Introduced Mammals of the World: Their History, Distribution, and Influence. Csiro Publishing, Collingwood, Australia. ISBN 9780643099166
  15. ^ Stuart, C.; Stuart, T. (1997). Field Guide to the Larger Mammals of Africa. Penguin Random House South Africa. ISBN 1-86825-757-6.
  16. ^ Fedigan, L.; Fedigan, L. M. (1988). Cercopithecus aethiops: a review of field studies. Cambridge (UK): Cambridge University Press. pp. 389–411.
  17. ^ Napier, P.H., ed. (1981). "Part II: Family Cercopithecidae, Subfamily Cercopithecinae". Catalogue of primates in the British Museum (Natural History) and elsewhere in the British Isles. London: British Museum (Natural History). p. 203.
  18. ^ Pasternak, G.; Brown, L.; Kienzle, S.; Fuller, A.; Barrett, L.; Henzi, P. (2013). "Population ecology of vervet monkey in a high latitude, semi-arid riparian woodland". Koedoe. 55 (1). doi:10.4102/koedoe.v55i1.1078. hdl:10500/8791.
  19. ^ Cheney, D. L.; Seyfarth, R. M. (September 1983). "Nonrandom dispersal in free-ranging vervet monkeys: social and genetic consequences". The American Naturalist. 122 (3): 392–412. doi:10.1086/284142. JSTOR 2461023. S2CID 84820877.
  20. ^ Cheney, D. L.; Seyfarth, R. M. (1982). "Recognition of individuals within and between groups of free-ranging vervet monkeys". American Zoologist. 22 (3): 519–529. doi:10.1093/icb/22.3.519. JSTOR 3882575.
  21. ^ Cheney, D. L.; Seyfarth, R. M. (1986). "The recognition of social alliances by vervet monkeys". Animal Behaviour. 34 (6): 1722–1731. doi:10.1016/S0003-3472(86)80259-7. S2CID 53184485.
  22. ^ Seyfarth, R. M.; Cheney, D. L; Marler, P. (1980). "Vervet monkey alarm calls: semantic communication in a free-ranging primate". Animal Behaviour. 28 (4): 1070–1094. doi:10.1016/S0003-3472(80)80097-2. S2CID 53165940.
  23. ^ Cheney, D. L.; Seyfarth, R.M. (1988). "Assessment of meaning and the detection of unreliable signals by vervet monkeys". Animal Behaviour. 36 (2): 477–486. doi:10.1016/S0003-3472(88)80018-6. S2CID 53167785.
  24. ^ Estes, Richard Despard (2012). The behaviour guide to African mammals (20th Anniversary ed.). London England: University of California press.
  25. ^ Cheney, D. L.; Seyfarth, R. M. (1980). "Vocal recognition in free-ranging vervet monkeys". Animal Behaviour. 28 (2): 362–367. doi:10.1016/S0003-3472(80)80044-3. S2CID 53258798.
  26. ^ Lee, P.C. (1987). "Sibships: cooperation and competition among immature vervet monkeys". Primates. 28 (1): 47–59. doi:10.1007/BF02382182. S2CID 21449948.
  27. ^ Fairbanks, L. A. (1990). "Reciprocal benefits of allomothering for female vervet monkeys". Animal Behaviour. 40 (3): 553–562. doi:10.1016/S0003-3472(05)80536-6. S2CID 53193890.
  28. ^ Fairbanks, L. A. (1988). "Vervet monkey grandmothers: interactions with infant grandoffspring". International Journal of Primatology. 9 (5): 426–441. doi:10.1007/bf02736218. S2CID 6784648.
  29. ^ Horrocks, J.; Hunte, W. (1981). "'Spite'; a constraint on optimal foraging in the vervet monkey Cercopithecus aethiops sabaeus in Barbados". American Zoology. 21: 939.
  30. ^ Pooley, E. (1993). The Complete Field Guide to Trees of Natal, Zululand and Transkei. ISBN 0-620-17697-0.
  31. ^ Foggo, D. (6 July 2008). "Germ warfare fear over African monkeys taken to Iran". The Times. London. Retrieved 27 March 2010.
  32. ^ Mngoma, N. (19 September 2014). "R10 000 reward for monkey killer". IOL. Retrieved 24 May 2017.
  33. ^ Moeyersons, J.; Vermeersch, P. M.; Beeckman, H.; Van Peer, P. (1999). "Holocene environmental changes in the Gebel Umm Hammad, Eastern Desert, Egypt: Dry cave deposits and their palaeoenvironmental significance during the last 115 ka, Sodmein Cave, Red Sea Mountains, Egypt". Geomorphology. 26 (4): 297–312. doi:10.1016/S0169-555X(98)00067-1.
  34. ^ Michael Hogan, C. (13 December 2007). "Akrotiri". Modern Antiquarian. Retrieved 13 July 2008.
  35. ^ Osypińska, Marta (December 2016). "Pet cats at the Early Roman Red Sea port of Berenike, Egypt". Antiquity. 90 (354). doi:10.15184/aqy.2016.181.

External links Edit

  • Vervet Monkey Foundation
  • BBC story: Vervet monkeys raid farms
  • Darwin Primate Group
  • Vervet monkey, Primate Info Net
  • Computerized atlas of vervet brain MRI
  • Alcoholism in vervet monkeys

vervet, monkey, vervet, monkey, chlorocebus, pygerythrus, simply, vervet, world, monkey, family, cercopithecidae, native, africa, term, vervet, also, used, refer, members, genus, chlorocebus, five, distinct, subspecies, found, mostly, throughout, southern, afr. The vervet monkey Chlorocebus pygerythrus or simply vervet is an Old World monkey of the family Cercopithecidae native to Africa 3 The term vervet is also used to refer to all the members of the genus Chlorocebus The five distinct subspecies can be found mostly throughout Southern Africa as well as some of the eastern countries These mostly herbivorous monkeys have black faces and grey body hair color ranging in body length from about 40 cm 16 in for females to about 50 cm 20 in for males Vervet monkey 1 Adult vervet monkey source source Calls recorded at Lake Naivasha KenyaConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 2 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder PrimatesSuborder HaplorhiniInfraorder SimiiformesFamily CercopithecidaeGenus ChlorocebusSpecies C pygerythrusBinomial nameChlorocebus pygerythrusF Cuvier 1821 Native RangeIn addition to behavioral research on natural populations vervet monkeys serve as a nonhuman primate model for understanding genetic and social behaviors of humans They have been noted for having human like characteristics such as hypertension anxiety and social and dependent alcohol use 4 Vervets live in social groups ranging from 10 to 70 individuals with males moving to other groups at the time of sexual maturity Studies done on vervet monkeys involve their communication and alarm calls specifically in regard to kin and group recognition and particular predator sightings Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Synonymy 2 Distribution and habitat 2 1 Natural habitat 2 2 Introduced 3 Physical description 4 Behaviour 4 1 Social behaviour 4 2 Alarm calls and offspring recognition 4 3 Kin relationships 4 4 Spite 4 5 Reproduction 5 Ecology 5 1 Diet 5 2 Relationship with humans 6 Gallery 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy EditThe vervet monkey was previously classified as Cercopithecus aethiops now renamed grivet and reclassified as Chlorocebus The vervet and malbrouck have also been considered conspecific or as subspecies of a widespread Ch aethiops 5 The different taxa are distinguished by coat colour and other morphological characteristics The characteristics of Ch aethiops graduate into Ch pygerythrus where their ranges meet and thus deciding if the vervets commonly known to occur in Kenya are actually Ch aethiops is difficult animals in the same pack may be classified as one species or the other and Ch pygerythrus may also interbreed with Ch tantalus where their ranges meet 6 Colin Groves recognised the below five subspecies of vervet monkey in the third edition of Mammals of the World 1 Chlorocebus pygerythrus excubitor Ch p hilgerti from southern Kenya 7 Ch p nesiotes Ch p pygerythrus from South Africa Botswana 7 Lesotho and Eswatini 8 Ch p rufoviridis from Mozambique 7 and Uganda has a distinctly reddish coloured back which is darker towards the base of the tail 9 Groves used Ch p hilgerti for all East African vervets except the insular subspecies Ch p excubitor and Ch p nesiotes The name Ch p centralis has been suggested to have precedence and that Ch p hilgerti should be restricted to the population of southern Ethiopia 10 Synonymy Edit Ch p pygerythrus as Cercopithecus aethiops was also formerly divided into four subspecies C a pygerythrus from South Africa Western Cape Eastern Cape Northern Cape and southern KwaZulu Natal and Lesotho is said to have pale colored limbs and white hands and feet though the hands are also said to be black with a scattering of greyish hairs 9 and a greyish body colour with an olive sheen 8 C a cloetei from northern KwaZulu Natal Eswatini and northern South Africa is darker with greyish brown speckles and dark feet 8 C a marjoriae from southern Botswana and the North West Province of South Africa is pale in colour light ash grey 8 C a ngamiensis 11 from north eastern Botswana and the Okavango has pale feet and a yellowish back 8 and the tail is darker especially towards the tip than in other southern vervets 9 These subspecies are no longer recognised and are synonymous with Ch p pygerythrus Distribution and habitat EditNatural habitat Edit The vervet monkey ranges throughout much of Southern and East Africa being found from Ethiopia and extreme southern South Sudan all the way down to South Africa It is not found west of the East African Rift or the Luangwa River 1 where it is replaced by the closely related malbrouck C cynosuros species The vervet monkey inhabits savanna riverine woodland coastal forest and mountains up to 4000 m 13 100 ft They are adaptable and able to persist in secondary and or highly fragmented vegetation including cultivated areas and sometimes are found living in both rural and urban environments 2 Annual home range size has been observed to be as high as 176 ha with an average population density of 54 68 animals km Introduced Edit Vervet monkeys that are naturalised introduced by humans are found in Cape Verde Ascension Island Saint Helena St Kitts and Nevis and Barbados 12 Dania Beach Florida is home to about 40 introduced vervets 13 14 Physical description EditThe vervet monkey very much resembles a gray langur having a black face with a white fringe of hair while its overall hair color is mostly grizzled grey 15 16 The species exhibits sexual dimorphism the males are larger in weight and body length and may be recognized by a turquoise blue scrotum Adult males weigh between 3 9 and 8 0 kg 8 6 and 17 6 lb averaging 5 5 kg 12 lb and have a body length between 420 and 600 mm 17 and 24 in averaging 490 mm 19 in from the top of the head to the base of the tail Adult females weigh between 3 4 and 5 3 kg 7 5 and 11 7 lb and average 4 1 kg 9 0 lb and measure between 300 and 495 mm 11 8 and 19 5 in averaging 426 mm 16 8 in 9 17 Behaviour EditSocial behaviour Edit nbsp A vervet monkey grooms another in Gaborone Botswana nbsp Juvenile C p rufoviridis UgandaWhen males reach sexual maturity they move to a neighboring group 18 Often males move with a brother or peer presumably for protection against aggression by males and females of the resident group Groups that had previously transferred males show significantly less aggression upon the arrival of another male In almost every case males migrate to adjacent groups This obviously increases benefits in regard to distance traveled but also reduces the amount of genetic variance increasing the likelihood of inbreeding 19 Females remain in their groups throughout life Separate dominance hierarchies are found for each sex Male hierarchies are determined by age tenure in the group fighting abilities and allies while female hierarchies are dependent on maternal social status A large proportion of interactions occurs between individuals that are similarly ranked and closely related Between unrelated individuals female competition exists for grooming members of high ranking families presumably to gain more access to resources These observations suggest individual recognition is possible and enables discrimination of genetic relatedness and social status Interactions between different groups are variable ranging from highly aggressive to friendly Furthermore individuals seem to be able to recognise cross group vocalisations and identify from and to which monkey each call is intended even if the call is made by a subadult male which is likely to transfer groups This suggests the members within a group are actively monitoring the activity of other groups including the movement of individuals within a group 20 Within groups aggression is directed primarily at individuals that are lower on the hierarchy Once an individual is three years or older it is considerably more likely to be involved in conflict Conflict often arises when one group member shows aggression toward a close relative of another Further both males and females may redirect aggression towards individuals in which both had close relatives that were previously involved in a conflict This suggests complex recognition not only of individuals but also of associations between individuals This does not suggest recognition of other s individual kinship bonds is possible but rather that discrimination of social relationships does occur 21 nbsp Female and juvenile Kruger Park South AfricaAlarm calls and offspring recognition Edit Vervet monkeys have four confirmed predators leopards eagles pythons and baboons The sighting of each predator elicits an acoustically distinct alarm call 22 As infants vervets learn to make the variety of calls from observation alone without explicit tutelage In experimentation with unreliable signalers individuals became habituated to incorrect calls from a specific individual Though the response was lessened for a specific predator if an unreliable individual gives an alarm call for a different predator group members respond as if the alarm caller is in fact reliable This suggests vervet monkeys are able to recognize and to respond to not only the individual calling but also to the semantics of what the individual is communicating 23 Vervet monkeys are thought to have up to 30 different alarm calls In the wild they have been seen giving a different call when seeing a human being approaching leading researchers to believe that vervet monkeys may have a way of distinguishing between different land and flight predators 24 Mothers can recognise their offspring by a scream alone A juvenile scream elicits a reaction from all mothers yet the juvenile s own mother has a shorter latency in looking in the direction of the scream as well as an increased duration in her look Further mothers have been observed to help their offspring in conflict yet rarely aid other juveniles Other mothers evidently can determine to which mother the offspring belongs Individuals have been observed to look towards the mother whose offspring is creating the scream 25 Kin relationships Edit Siblings likely provide the prevailing social relationships during development Within social groups mother offspring and sibling interactive units are distinct groups The sibling interactions are heavily supportive and friendly but do have some competition Contests primarily involve postweaning resource allocation by the common mother For example siblings have conflict over grooming time allocated by their mother Offspring are usually not born in extremely close time proximity due to the interbirth period of the mother This time can be reduced by use of an allomother The clarity of the familial and sibships within a group may act as a form of alliance which would come at relatively low cost in regards to grooming Other alliances are shown through conflict with aggressive individuals that have acted against a closely related sibling 26 nbsp Vervet monkey female with a babyAllomothering is the process when another individual besides the mother cares for an infant In groups of vervet monkeys infants are the target of a tremendous amount of attention Days after an infant is born every member of the group inspects the infant at least once by touching or sniffing While all group members participate in infant caretaking juvenile females that cannot yet menstruate are responsible for the majority of allomothering The benefit is mutual for the mother and allomother Mothers that use allomothers are able to shorten their interbirth periods the time between successive births At the same time allomothers gain experience in rearing infants and had more success in raising their own offspring Juvenile females discriminate in preference for the infant they choose to allomother and usually choose siblings or infants of high ranking individuals When a mother allows her juvenile daughter to become an allomother for a newborn sibling the mother decreases her own investment in the infant while increasing the chances of successful rearing of her immature daughter 27 Grandmothers and grandchildren share one quarter of their genes so they should be more likely to form affiliative relationships than unrelated members in a group Not only do infants approach their grandmothers more often than unrelated members but they also prefer their grandmothers compared to other adult female kin not including their own mothers Additional research has shown grandmothers show no preference over the sex of their grandchild Interest in the grandchild spurred from the rank of the grandmother within a group Higher ranking grandmothers showed more interest in caring for their grandchildren when compared to low ranking grandmothers The presence of grandmothers has been associated with a decrease in mortality of infants 28 Spite Edit Spiteful actions are extremely rare in the animal kingdom Often an indirect benefit is gained by the individual acting spitefully or by a close relative of that individual Vervet monkeys have been observed to destroy a competitor s food source rather than consume or steal it themselves While energy is being lost on destroying the food an advantage is obtained by the individual due to an increase in competitive gain This would be pertinent for a male that could be displaced within his group by immigrating males 29 Reproduction Edit Female vervets do not have external signs indicating estrus thus elaborate social behaviors involving reproduction do not occur Typically a female gives birth once a year between September and February after a gestation period around 165 days Usually only one infant is born at a time though twins can occur rarely A normal infant weighs 300 400 grams 11 14 oz 9 Ecology EditDiet Edit The vervet monkey eats a primarily herbivorous diet living mostly on wild fruits flowers leaves seeds and seed pods In agricultural areas vervets become problem animals as they raid bean pea young tobacco vegetable fruit and grain crops Animal foods of their diet include grasshoppers and termites Raids of cattle egrets and weaver bird nests have been observed where the vervets eat the eggs and chicks 9 A list of some natural food plants and part of the plant eaten in South Africa 9 30 Acacia erioloba seeds and pods Aloe spp nectar flowers Celtis africana fruit Colophospermum mopane seeds Deinbollia oblongifolia fruit Euphorbia ingens fruit Euphorbia tirucalli fruit Ficus abutilifolia figs Ficus sur figs Ficus sycomorus figs Grewia caffra fruit Harpephyllum caffrum fruit Hyphaene coriacea fruit Phoenix reclinata fruit Protorhus longifolia fruit Rhus chirindensis fruit Sclerocarya birrea fruit Strelitzia nicolai soft parts of the flowers Ximenia caffra fruit Ziziphus mucronata fruit Relationship with humans Edit nbsp An infant vervet monkey South AfricaThe monkeys are used for biomedical research 31 Many people living in close proximity to vervet colonies see them as pests as they steal their food Heavy fines in some areas discourage the killing of vervet monkeys 32 Its status according to the IUCN is least concern This species was known in ancient Egypt including the Red Sea Mountains and the Nile Valley 33 From fresco artworks found in Akrotiri on the Mediterranean island of Santorini there is evidence that the vervet monkey was known to the inhabitants of this settlement around 2000 BC this fact is most noted for evidence of early contact between Egypt and Akrotiri 34 Excavations dated to the end of the 1st century AD from Berenike a Roman Egyptian port town on the Red Sea coast demonstrate that vervet monkeys must have been kept as pets at that time 35 Gallery Edit nbsp Adult male vervet monkey in South Africa nbsp Front view of the skull of a vervet monkey nbsp Side view of the skull nbsp Vervet monkeys in SamburuReferences Edit a b c Groves C P 2005 Chlorocebus pygerythrus In 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 159 ISBN 0 801 88221 4 OCLC 62265494 a b Butynski T M de Jong Y A 2019 Chlorocebus pygerythrus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T136271A17957823 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 3 RLTS T136271A17957823 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 Vervet Monkey Chlorocebus pygerythrus iNaturalist Retrieved 6 June 2023 Palmour R Mulligan J Howbert J J Ervin F 1997 Of monkeys and men vervets and the genetics of human like behaviors American Journal of Human Genetics 61 3 481 488 doi 10 1086 515526 PMC 1715973 PMID 9326311 Kingdon J 1997 The Kingdom Guide to African Mammals Academic Press Limited London ISBN 0 12 408355 2 de Jong Y Butynski T 14 January 2015 A rainbow of savanna monkeys National Geographic Society Newsroom National Geographic Retrieved 10 April 2021 a b c Biodiversity occurrence data provided by Field Museum of Natural History Museum of Vertebrate Zoology University of Washington Burke Museum and University of Turku Accessed through GBIF Data Portal www gbif net 2010 06 18 a b c d e Cillie B 1992 Pocket guide to southern African mammals Van Schaik Publishers ISBN 0 627 01686 3 a b c d e f g Skinner J D amp Smithers R H N 1990 The mammals of the southern African subregion 2nd ed Pretoria South Africa University of Pretoria p 771 ISBN 0 86979 802 2 Gippoliti S December 2018 The name of the East African vervet monkey genus Chlorocebus Gray 1870 Primates Cercopithecidae Doriana Genoa 9 404 ISSN 0417 9927 Meester J A J I L Rautenbach N J Dippenaar and C M Baker 1986 Classification of southern African mammals Transvaal Museum Monographs 5 1 359 McGuire M T June 1974 The history of the St Kitts vervet Caribbean Quarterly 20 2 37 52 doi 10 1080 00086495 1974 11829225 ISSN 0008 6495 Scientist concerned about vervet monkeys missing from Dania Beach colony 11 February 2020 Long J L 2003 Introduced Mammals of the World Their History Distribution and Influence Csiro Publishing Collingwood Australia ISBN 9780643099166 Stuart C Stuart T 1997 Field Guide to the Larger Mammals of Africa Penguin Random House South Africa ISBN 1 86825 757 6 Fedigan L Fedigan L M 1988 Cercopithecus aethiops a review of field studies Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 389 411 Napier P H ed 1981 Part II Family Cercopithecidae Subfamily Cercopithecinae Catalogue of primates in the British Museum Natural History and elsewhere in the British Isles London British Museum Natural History p 203 Pasternak G Brown L Kienzle S Fuller A Barrett L Henzi P 2013 Population ecology of vervet monkey in a high latitude semi arid riparian woodland Koedoe 55 1 doi 10 4102 koedoe v55i1 1078 hdl 10500 8791 Cheney D L Seyfarth R M September 1983 Nonrandom dispersal in free ranging vervet monkeys social and genetic consequences The American Naturalist 122 3 392 412 doi 10 1086 284142 JSTOR 2461023 S2CID 84820877 Cheney D L Seyfarth R M 1982 Recognition of individuals within and between groups of free ranging vervet monkeys American Zoologist 22 3 519 529 doi 10 1093 icb 22 3 519 JSTOR 3882575 Cheney D L Seyfarth R M 1986 The recognition of social alliances by vervet monkeys Animal Behaviour 34 6 1722 1731 doi 10 1016 S0003 3472 86 80259 7 S2CID 53184485 Seyfarth R M Cheney D L Marler P 1980 Vervet monkey alarm calls semantic communication in a free ranging primate Animal Behaviour 28 4 1070 1094 doi 10 1016 S0003 3472 80 80097 2 S2CID 53165940 Cheney D L Seyfarth R M 1988 Assessment of meaning and the detection of unreliable signals by vervet monkeys Animal Behaviour 36 2 477 486 doi 10 1016 S0003 3472 88 80018 6 S2CID 53167785 Estes Richard Despard 2012 The behaviour guide to African mammals 20th Anniversary ed London England University of California press Cheney D L Seyfarth R M 1980 Vocal recognition in free ranging vervet monkeys Animal Behaviour 28 2 362 367 doi 10 1016 S0003 3472 80 80044 3 S2CID 53258798 Lee P C 1987 Sibships cooperation and competition among immature vervet monkeys Primates 28 1 47 59 doi 10 1007 BF02382182 S2CID 21449948 Fairbanks L A 1990 Reciprocal benefits of allomothering for female vervet monkeys Animal Behaviour 40 3 553 562 doi 10 1016 S0003 3472 05 80536 6 S2CID 53193890 Fairbanks L A 1988 Vervet monkey grandmothers interactions with infant grandoffspring International Journal of Primatology 9 5 426 441 doi 10 1007 bf02736218 S2CID 6784648 Horrocks J Hunte W 1981 Spite a constraint on optimal foraging in the vervet monkey Cercopithecus aethiops sabaeus in Barbados American Zoology 21 939 Pooley E 1993 The Complete Field Guide to Trees of Natal Zululand and Transkei ISBN 0 620 17697 0 Foggo D 6 July 2008 Germ warfare fear over African monkeys taken to Iran The Times London Retrieved 27 March 2010 Mngoma N 19 September 2014 R10 000 reward for monkey killer IOL Retrieved 24 May 2017 Moeyersons J Vermeersch P M Beeckman H Van Peer P 1999 Holocene environmental changes in the Gebel Umm Hammad Eastern Desert Egypt Dry cave deposits and their palaeoenvironmental significance during the last 115 ka Sodmein Cave Red Sea Mountains Egypt Geomorphology 26 4 297 312 doi 10 1016 S0169 555X 98 00067 1 Michael Hogan C 13 December 2007 Akrotiri Modern Antiquarian Retrieved 13 July 2008 Osypinska Marta December 2016 Pet cats at the Early Roman Red Sea port of Berenike Egypt Antiquity 90 354 doi 10 15184 aqy 2016 181 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chlorocebus pygerythrus nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Vervet monkey Vervet Monkey Foundation BBC story Vervet monkeys raid farms Darwin Primate Group Vervet monkey Primate Info Net Computerized atlas of vervet brain MRI Alcoholism in vervet monkeys Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vervet monkey amp oldid 1178331730, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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