Showing posts with label mixed-species. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mixed-species. Show all posts

Sunday, 13 July 2014

Mini-Monkeys: Monkeys with Moustaches

Emperor tamarin (bearded subspecies)
Monkeys of the marmoset family, which include tamarins, are known, not just for their small size, but also their luxuriant fur, which often forms extravagant tufts on the head. Arguably, none of these tufts are more distinctive than the drooping moustaches of emperor tamarins (Saguinus imperator).

Emperor tamarins live in the lowland jungles just east of the Andes, in the border regions between western Peru, northern Bolivia, and eastern Brazil. Perhaps because of this remote location, they were discovered remarkably late for an animal so distinctive; they were first described by Brazilian zoologist Émil Goeldi in 1907 (and we'll be coming back to him in a later post). On the plus side, this distance from civilisation has kept them relatively secure, with loggers and the like only recently having reached this far into the jungle.

Compared with some other members of their family, they are not especially colourful. Their bodies are grey, reaching near-black on the face and hands, and they have a reddish tail with a grey tip. What makes them so noticeable, of course, are those long, pure white, moustaches, which are present in both sexes.  Indeed, the more widespread of the two subspecies also has a thin and straggly beard hanging from its chin. The moustache apparently reminded Goeldi of Kaiser Wilhelm II, although to be honest, it's hard to see why (one would have thought that some of the Chinese emperors would have made a better fit).

Sunday, 15 June 2014

Mini-Monkeys: Chilling Out With the Mantled Tamarins

Golden-mantled tamarin
Over the last five months I have looked at the 22 widely recognised species of marmoset. However, as I mentioned back when I started, not all members of the marmoset family are actually marmosets. Almost all of the others are tamarins, the majority of which belong to the genus Saguinus, also known as the 'true' tamarins.

So what is the difference between a marmoset and a tamarin? On the face of it, they look quite similar, and, indeed, being members of the same family, that's not entirely inaccurate. They're roughly the same size, have the same luxuriant fur, often with extravagant tufts, and have the same basic body plan, with a long non-prehensile tail, clawed toes, and so on. The most significant difference though, and the one on which they were first separated back in the early 19th century, is in the shape of their teeth.

Unlike marmosets, tamarins have prominent canine teeth in their lower jaw. These are often called "tusks", although by a strict definition, tusks have to project outside the lips (as they do in wild boars or elephants), which these don't. In fact, they're actually no larger than those of marmosets, they just look that way because the incisor teeth that separate them at the front of the mouth are of a more normal size. In marmosets, the incisors are elongated and cylindrical, forming a straight line with the top of the canines, but in tamarins, the closer in size to what you'd expect in monkeys, making the canines stand out.

Sunday, 4 December 2011

Hanging Out with Other Species

Spinner dolphin
Animals interact with members of other species in a range of different ways. Most obvious, perhaps, are predator-prey relationships, but not all interactions necessarily have to have the potential for violence. Often, we find members of different species living side by side because they simply happen to like the same habitat, or one species may steal the burrows of another rather than making the effort to dig their own. But there are also some more organised relationships, where two or more relatively large mammalian species actively congregate together for some sort of mutual benefit.

We commonly see this in herd animal, especially where one species is relatively rare within a given region. So long as they don't irritate the other species too much, it may be to the benefit of the rarer one to join the herd of the more common species, gaining the advantage from large herd sizes that it cannot achieve on its own. Aside from grazing herd animals, other social animals that often congregate with other, related, species, include examples among both primates and cetaceans. (Examples from other groups of mammal are rarer, but have been reported).

Broadly speaking, there are three different reasons why animals might want to actively hang out with members of another species. There is no particular why two or more of these reasons cannot be true at once, and disentangling them can take a fair amount of observation. Let's take a look at one recent study as an example.