Western red colobus explained

The western red colobus (Piliocolobus badius), also known as the bay red colobus, rust red colobus or Upper Guinea red colobus, is a species of Old World monkey in West African forests from Senegal to Ghana. All other species of red colobuses have formerly been considered subspecies of P. badius. The monkey is a frequent prey of the common chimpanzee. In 1994, western red colobus monkeys infected many chimpanzees with Ebola virus after being hunted and consumed by the chimps.[1]

Subspecies

According to Groves (2005) the Western red colobus has three subspecies, including the nominate:

P. b. waldronae is critically endangered, possibly even extinct. The other two subspecies are endangered. Under more recent taxonomies, these are generally considered separate species.[2] Groves concurs with this revision, although not all primatologists agree.[2] [3]

Description

The western red colobus grows to a head-and-body length of 450to with a tail of 520to, and a weight of between 5and. It has red or chestnut-brown head and limbs and black, slatey-grey or dark brown upper parts. It does not have long fringes of hair, or tufts of hair on the tail. Compared to monkeys in the genus Colobus, the nostrils are V-shaped, the digits are long and the big toe short.[4]

Distribution and habitat

The red colobus is endemic to tropical West Africa. Its range includes various fragmentary populations in Sierra Leone, and contiguous populations in Liberia, Guinea and western Ivory Coast. It is unclear exactly where the ranges of P. b. badius and P. b. temminckii meet, but P. b. badius populations are separated from P. b. waldronae by the Bandama River in Ivory Coast. The red colobus is an arboreal species, typically found in primary rainforest, but also inhabiting secondary forest and gallery forest.

Ecology

The red colobus lives in colonies of between twelve and eighty members. There are usually several males and up to three times this number of adult females. There is a social hierarchy, giving access to food, space and grooming.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://virus.stanford.edu/filo/eboci.html Ebola Cote d'Ivoire Outbreaks
  2. Book: Handbook of the Mammals of the World: Volume 3, Primates. 2013. 978-8496553897. Lynx. Mittermeier, Russell A. . Rylands, Anthony B. . Wilson, Don E.. Zinner, D. . Fickenscher, G.H. . Roos, C.. 705–706.
  3. Book: An Introduction to Primate Conservation. Groves, C.P.. Wich, Serge A. . Marshall, Andrew J.. Species concepts and conservation. 45–47. 2016. Oxford University Press . 9780198703396. Colin Groves.
  4. Book: Ronald M. Nowak. Walker's Primates of the World. registration. 1999 . JHU Press . 978-0-8018-6251-9 . 38–39.