| Tuesday 27 October 2009 - 07:22 gmt |
| Request 7920. |
REPOSTING: MONKEY SPECIES BY GEOGRAPHIC LOCATION |
| |
I am looking for photographs of the following species of primates. If you have photos from these localities or know people that do have photos of these species from these localities.
It is unlikely any of the above listed primates are in captivity except perhaps in a habitat country near or in their range so please do not send zoo shots from the developed world. |
| |
1 Alouatta arctoidea Groves thinks subspecies of seniculus Venezuela, from left margin of Orinoco river to the coastal region. This range includes the States of Falcón, Lara, Guarico, Yaracuy, Carabobo, Aragua, Miranda, Apure, Cojedes, Trujillo, Monagas, Anzoátegui, and Barinas.
2 Alouatta aurata see A.macconnelli
3 Alouatta discolor Was a subspecies of Alouatta belzebul Brazil - South of the Rio Amazonas, from the right bank of the Rio Tapajós to the lower Rio Tocantins, in the states of Pará and Mato Grosso.
4 Alouatta.macconnelli was subspecies of Alouatta seniculus Brazil, on northern margin of Amazonas river and Negro e Branco rivers, at States of Amapá, Pará, Amazonas, and Roraima, widespread on whole Guyana, French Guyana, and Suriname, and southern and eastern Venezuela, on right margin of Orinoco river.
5 Alouatta nigerrima also known as A. belzebul. nigerrima Brazil - Region east of the Rio Trombetas and in a presumably isolated population within the range of A. macconelli at Oriximiná, at the mouth of the Rio Trombetas, and west of the Rio Madeira at Lago Janauacá. It extends east to the Rio Tapajós and probably as far as the Rio Tocantins and is sympatric with A. belzebul at Tucuruí Dam (4ºS, 49ºW).
6 Alouatta ululata was a subspecies of Alouatta belzebul Brazil - the northern part of the states of Maranhão, Piauí and Ceará, from the Rio Mearim in Maranhão to the Serra do Ibiapaba, in Ceará. Centro de Proteção de Primatas Brasileiros-Ibama (primatas.sede@icmbio.gov.br or marcelo.oliveira@icmbio.gov.br)
7 Aotus brombacki Very poorly known. At least from eastern Boyacá into the forested parts of Meta in Colombia. Defler considers it possible that the taxon be distributed in all the Andean lowlands of Colombia.
8 Aotus trivirgatus East of the Río Negro and Orinoco in Brazil and Venezuela. Defler suggests that the species may extend west to eastern Colombia Cit: 3 based on his personal observation of two individuals from the middle Caquetá River above the mouth of the Mirití-Paraná and another one from the lower Inírida River. Since these individuals fitted the description of the species by Hershkovitz, Defler suggests that it is possible that A. trivirgatus may be sympatric with A. vociferans in Colombia. Defler points at the need to determine the karyotypes for individuals in eastern Colombian Llanos to confirm the presence of the species in Colombia
10 Avahi peyrierasi Type # 1
11 Cacajao calvus novaesi The distribution of Cacajao calvus novaesi has been updated since first described by Hershkovitz (1987), when it was known only on the south bank of the upper Juruá River between the Tarauacá and Eirú Rivers. De Sousa e Silva Júnior and de Sousa Martins (1999) summarized new range information, largely from Peres (1988, 1990, 1997) who found it to the northeast of the range described by Hershkovitz (1987), on the left bank of the Juruá and at Lago da Fortuna, Carauari to the north. Peres also recorded Cacajao calvus on the right bank of the upper Juruá River at Sobral, but this population could have been either Cacajao calvus novaesi or Cacajao calvus ucayalii.
12 Cacajao calvus rubicundus not ucayalii Cacajao calvus rubicundus is distributed on the north bank of the Solimões River in Amazonas, Brazil from opposite São Paulo de Olivença, to the mouth of the Içá River (Hershkovitz 1987a). Cacajao calvus rubicundus also occurs south of the Solimões west of the Jutaí River at the Jutaí-Solimões Ecological Station (Nogueira-Neto 1992).
13 Callicebus baptista Eastern Brazilian Amazon, in the state of Amazonas, south of the Rios Amazonas and Madiera and north of the Paraná do Urariá and Paraná do Ramos; also south of the Paraná do Ramos between the Rio Andirá and the Rio Uíra-Curupá
14 Callicebus caligatus Central Amazon in State of Amazonas, Brazil, south of the Rios Purus/Solimões and north and west of the Rio Madeira; western border of range may be the Rio Ipixuna, where it abuts range of C stephennashi
15 Callicebus cinerascens Central Brazilian Amazon, south of the lower reaches of the Rio Madiera, bounded on the east by the Rio Canumã, the Rio Sucundurí, and the upper reaches of the Rio Aripuaná and on the west by the lower reaches of the Rio Aripuaná and the Rio Roosevelt
16 Callicebus discolor Upper Amazonian region in Perú, south of the Río Marañon in the entire interfluve delineated by the Ríos Ucayalli and Huallaga, and north of the Río Marañon between Ríos Napo and Santiago. In Ecuador from the Andean foothills east to the Río Napo/Aguarico basin, and north to the Río Putumayo. In Colombia, Departamento Putumayo between the rivers Guamués and Sucumbíos
17 Callicebus medemi Colombia: between the Caqueta and Putumayo rivers.
18 Callicebus melanochir Atlantic coastal forest of Brazil, between the Rios Mucuri and Paraguaçú
19 Callicebus moloch may have one from MVR Eastern Brazilian Amazon in the States of Pará and Mato Grosso, south of the Rio Amazonas and east of the Rio Juruena/Tapajós
20 Callicebus ornatus Eastern Colombia, from the department of Cundinamarca (Medina) north as far as the lower Río Upía/Rio Meta, and south into the department of Meta, along the base of the Cordillera Oriental and the Sierra de la Macarena to the Río Guayabero/upper Río Guaviare.
21 Callicebus purinus Brazil: 'south of the Rio Solimoes between the Rios Purus and Jurua. It extends south as far as the Rio Tapaua or even the Rio Pauini if the species reported to occur between the Rios Tapaua and Pauini, left bank of tributaries of the Rio Purus, does not represent a new form.' (p34)
22 Callicebus regulus Brazil: 'between the upper Rio Solimoes, the lower Rio Javari, and the left (west) bank of the Rio Jurua from mouth at the Rio Solimoes to about 7 degrees S.' (p35)
23 Callicebus torquatus There are no longer any subspecies recognized. Brazil: north of Solimoes/Japura rivers, south of Negro/Uaupes rivers, east of Apaporis/upper Vaupes rivers. '..east at least as far as the town of Codajas, maybe even as far as the town of Manacapuru, both on the north bank of the Rio Solimoes, west of Manaus.' (p31)
24 Cebus cay C. cay inhabits the central western part of the geographic distribution of the tufted capuchins (Sapajus), and occurs in Brazil (Mato Grosso and Mato Grosso do Sul), Paraguay, southern Bolivia and north-western Argentina. C. cay is replaced by C. apella at the north and north-western limits of its distribution (at the transition from the Cerrado to Amazonia). The River Araguaia limits the eastern extension of its range. The exact boundary between this species and C. libidionosus at the headwaters of the Araguaia and Paraná River basins is unknown. The closest records of C. cay are well to the west in Mato Grosso do Sul. The River Paraná forms the south-eastern limit, at which point the species is superseded by C. nigritus. The geographic range of C. cay extends south into eastern Paraguay, however its presence in Chaco vegetation west of the River Paraguay is still in doubt. Cabrera considers it possible but only the immediate vicinity of the River. Brown and Colillas suggest that the contact zone for populations from eastern Paraguay with those from north-western Argentina occurs in an arc around Chaco vegetation. In Argentina, the species extends to the provinces of Jujuy, Salta and Tucumán.
25 Cheirogaleus adipicaudatus Southern Madagascar
26 Cheirogaleus minusculus Central Madagascar (type locality Ambositra) and most probably central western Madagascar (Bongolava) try URS
27 Cheirogaleus ravus Eastern Madagascar, from Tamatave (18 S) to Mahambo (17 S)
28 Chiropotes sagulatus In Brazil, north of the Amazon and east of the Rio Negro; in Guiana, east of the Essequibo and continuous to French Guiana; in Venezuela in the State of Bolivar (west of the Caroni and south of the Orinoco River, following the Orinoco River west into the State of Amazonas in Venezuela). The boundary between C. sagulatus and C. satanas is uncertain in southern Venezuela. Hershkovitz (1985 said that large portions of their distribution were unknown. This has improved with data from Boubli (2002) (8) and Kinzey et al. (1988) (7).
29 Hapalemur meridionalis South-eastern Madagascar, Mandena and Andohahela region, boundaries UNK
30 Lophocebus albigena johnstoni From Congo-Zaire, from the Oubangui (north of the River Congo) southeast to Kabambare (4 13 S, 27 07 E) and the Burundi, and east to Busoga
31 Lophocebus albigena osmani 'From Cross River, across Sanaga River to Edea and inland to the Batouri District.'
32 Loris lydekkerianus grandis Central mountains and lower foothills of Sri Lanka including Matale and Knuckles Ranges
33 Loris tardigradus nycticeboides The Horton Plains National Park and surrounding areas in the highlands of Sri Lanka
34 Mico emiliae This species is known only from Brazil. Rylands et al. (in review) estimate its distribution to be south of the Rio Irirí to the southern bank of the Rio Peixoto de Azevedo -- perhaps down to the upper Rio Paraguai, possibly allopatric with Mico melanurus. Van Roosmalen et al. (1998) presented a map of the Amazonian marmosets in which then-Callithrix emiliae was presumed to occupy the Irirí-Curuá interfluve and extend down to near the convergence of the Rio Teles Pires and the Rio Xingú. This range is extremely speculative, since sightings and specimens are extremely rare.
35 Mico intermedius or Callithrix intermedia Brazil, between the upper Aripuanã river and its western tributary, the Roosevelt river, upper Madeira river basinin southeastern Amazonas and northwestern Mato Grosso.
36 Mico marcai Known only from three museum specimens collected in 1914 at the type locality at the mouth of Castanho (=Roosevelt) river, a tributary of the left margin of Aripuanã river in the State of Amazonas, Brazil.
37 Otolemur monteiri 'Angola in the west, north to Rwanda and to western and southeastern Kenya. In northern Tanzania (according to Olson, in Nash et al. [1989], in a band from the Usambaras to Ngorongoro) this species and O. garnettii coexist in the same habitats, while Bearder et al. (1994) and Honess (1996) found them coexisting at several localities in the Mtwara and Lindi regions in the far southeast of Tanzania (approx. 10o00' to 10o40'S, 39o23' to 40o20'E).' (p.104)
38 Phaner electromontis Madagascar: Northern Madagascar, Montagne d'Ambre and close vicinity.
39 Phaner furcifer Madagascar: Eastern Madagascar, north of Toamasina including Masoala Peninsula
40 Pithecia wait for new publication
41 Pongo pygmaeus pygmaeus Northern part of West Kalimantan (Indonesia) and Sarawak (Malaysia)
42 Procolobus ellioti confined to small area of Bwamba, DRC Groves put this in P. foai as subspecies
43 Procolobus foai From Congo-Brazzaville to Congo-Zaire, north and east of the Congo River, into southern forests of Sudan and Central African Republic
44 Procolobus parmentieri This species is located in the Democratic Republic of the Congo between the Zaire/Lualaba and Lomami Rivers, south to about the Ruiki and Lutanga Rivers Groves considers this a subspecies of P. foai
45 Procolobus tholloni Salonga NP,Democratic Republic of Congo or South of Congo River, west of Lomami River (Dem. Rep. Congo). Groves 2005
46 Saguinus fuscus Southeastern Colombia, between the Caquetá-Caguán and Putumayo rivers, entering Northeastern Brazil, between the Japurá and Içá rivers. Ask Defler
47 Saimiri ustus Brazil south of the Amazon; considered by Hershkovitz (1984) and Thorington (1985) to be between the R. Purús and probably the R. Xingu, but Ayres (1985) reports specimens from well to the west of the R. Purús, on the right bank of L. Tefé, at approx. 61o30’W. Groves
48 Sciuirocheirus, gabonensis 'Occurs in the forested regions between the Sanaga and Ogooue Rivers in southern Cameroon and northern Gabon. The extent of its distribution into southern Gabon is uncertain. Its eastern extent is thought to be bounded by the Congo and Ubangui Rivers. Pierre Charles-Dominique |
| |
images MUST be these specific species. If you do not know for certain that it is the exact species DO NOT upload images. |
| |
- Colour images ONLY |
 |
 |
| Budget: |
| Inside, 1/4 page: |
US$175 |
(1/4 page, inside book, magazine or brochure) |
| Other: |
US$80 |
(for use other than book, magazine or brochure eg. poster, calender, advert, tv, website etc) |
|
| Notes on Budget: |
Book 5000 copies 8.5X11 English All the World's Primates. It is unlikely any of the above listed primates are in captivity except perhaps in a habitat country near their range so please do not send zoo shots from the developed world. |
| Use: |
editorial |
| Contact: |
*************** |
| Company: |
*************** |
| Country: |
United States |
| Tel: |
*************** |
| Fax: |
*************** |
| Email: |
*************** |
|