Aardwolf
Well-Known Member
Compared to the New World monkeys, my experience with Old World monkeys is very limited. Apart from a few days of relief work, helping out when short-staffed in a primate house at one zoo (an experience which I’m forced to conclude that neither the animals nor myself enjoyed), I’ve only worked with two species.
The lone guereza colobus that I cared for was at a non-AZA zoo that I rather wish neither of us had been at. Colobus are famous among zookeepers and visitors alike for their perpetually sad-looking faces. Well, I know that they always look like that – but I swear, this one was depressed. Which is an extra pity, because colobus are some of the few monkeys that I really like – not just in that I think they’re cool, but I like their personalities. They always strike me as more serene and even-mannered than many other monkeys, perhaps because their leaf-based diet doesn’t leave them with enough energy to be jerks. Perhaps not coincidentally, they mix well with many other species, including smaller primates, such as guenons (I often see them with Allen’s swamp monkeys). Perhaps this also explains why, from a sustainability perspective, these guys are in much better shape than many of the other Old World monkeys.
The colobus lived in a shabby exhibit of plywood, with limited opportunities for climbing and exploring. These are very arboreal primates, even more monkeys, and I could just about touch the ceiling when I stood on my tip toes. More importantly, he was alone, and these are some very social primates (seeing this species in the wild was my first hint of how unnaturally small the groups we keep many monkey species in really are). Now, sometimes an animal of a normally social species has to be kept alone for one reason or another – that animal’s particular behavior, medical concerns, etc. Maybe you are down to one individual of a species that you are going to phase out, and that animal is old so you don’t feel comfortable shipping it out, but you also don’t want to bring in more (this was the case for the Speke’s gazelle I described a few posts ago – the joke was on us, though, because the little guy was determined to live forever, or at least try to, out of spite). Fair enough. This animal was a perfectly healthy, fairly young, and, as far as I could tell, behaviorally competent. If we weren’t going to get another one (and getting another would have been fairly irresponsible, in my opinion, with the size and condition of our enclosure), we should have shipped this one out.
There was only a small indoor holding area – not much more than a closet – attached to the exhibit, and I never wanted to intrude on that, so the colobus and I shared space whenever I cleaned the exhibit. Quarters were tight – sometimes, I actually felt his tail brush against my face if he turned around suddenly – which is actually a little daunting, because those guys have some teeth on them, leaf-eaters be damned. He would calmly take a primate biscuit from my hand with an air of gravity and dignity, then retreat as far from me as he could to eat, while I tried to hide produce (mostly lettuce – again, leaf-eaters) as best as I could in a tiny, dingy little exhibit and pretend that it counted as enrichment.
My experiences with the second species were better, at least.
I worked with a pair of DeBrazza’s monkeys at another non-AZA zoo. The enclosure that they were in the same as those I described earlier for the galahs, king vulture, Andean condor, and ring-tailed lemurs at that facility – a wood and wire frame, mulch substrate, branches and stumps, and an attached indoor area heated with red bulbs; we had the ability to lock them into this stall in cold weather, defined as below freezing (though I’d often let them have access on days that were colder than that if it was sunny and felt warm – it was such a small space in there that I hated to have them cooped up if it wasn’t absolutely necessary). It wasn’t going to win any exhibit awards, but it was much better than what the colobus had, so it looked decent to me at the time.

I’ve often felt that DeBrazza’s are an ideal monkey for smaller zoos. Unlike many guenons, they’re naturally found in pairs quite often, instead of large troops, so it’s much easier to maintain a more natural social group (at other zoos, if you have just one male and one female guenon, the female can become quite stressed, as the male, hard-wired to exert his control over a harem of females, just has one girlfriend to devote his attention to, and can harass her constantly). And, true enough, our female DeBrazza – bearded, as the male was – was a fairly calm, sweet individual.
Of course, maybe she was allowed to be that way because the male was too focused on driving me crazy.
The male loved to play the game of tag. He’d ignore me completely as I serviced the exhibit, watching him out of the corner of my eye, until my attention would inevitably be distracted – a loud noise elsewhere, a visitor with a question, a radio call – and then he’d jump onto my back, then ricochet off before I could even react. He never tried to bite or do anything remotely aggressive – he just liked to jump on me and get a reaction, then bounce off to a high perch to look smugly at me as I glared at him.
Diet consisted of monkey chow in the morning. In the afternoon, I’d come by with a bucket of chopped produce that I’d spread out among the primates, parrots, warthogs, etc. I tried to scatter the produce as best as I could to allow both animals to get roughly even amounts (though I was not above handing a few special treats directly to the female). Otherwise, the male would grab as much as he could, as fast as he could, and stuff it into his cheeks for later.
One day, I saw a large, laughing crowd in front of the DeBrazza’s monkeys, which never struck me as a good sign. I hurried over just in time to see a glint of silver. Someone had thoughtfully tossed the monkeys a pocketful of change, and the male had a quarter in his mouth. Thinking to myself that I now knew how I was going to spend the rest of the afternoon, I went inside. After gathering up the rest of the coins, I set myself to the task of trying to get it away from him. Unfortunately, monkeys are smart, and while he didn’t particularly want the coin, he knew that I did, which gave him the upper hand. Climbing around the top of the exhibit, he worked his jaw repeatedly, stopping now and then to pull the quarter out, make sure that I could see it and admire it, and then tuck it back into his cheek pouches. Eventually, we came to an arrangement. I radioed for a coworker to bring me a banana (a major concession at that very-stingy zoo) and traded it to the monkey for the quarter… which I kept after he dropped it for me, perhaps the only time I’ve ever been tipped by one of the animals.
It was one of my fondest wishes at that zoo to breed the DeBrazza’s and I was excited when I saw our female start to get a little round. I was already set to transfer to another zoo, and it was a race between me and the baby to see if it would make it’s exit from the womb before I left the zoo. Unfortunately for me, I won that race. The female gave birth just a few days after I had packed up and left.
The lone guereza colobus that I cared for was at a non-AZA zoo that I rather wish neither of us had been at. Colobus are famous among zookeepers and visitors alike for their perpetually sad-looking faces. Well, I know that they always look like that – but I swear, this one was depressed. Which is an extra pity, because colobus are some of the few monkeys that I really like – not just in that I think they’re cool, but I like their personalities. They always strike me as more serene and even-mannered than many other monkeys, perhaps because their leaf-based diet doesn’t leave them with enough energy to be jerks. Perhaps not coincidentally, they mix well with many other species, including smaller primates, such as guenons (I often see them with Allen’s swamp monkeys). Perhaps this also explains why, from a sustainability perspective, these guys are in much better shape than many of the other Old World monkeys.
The colobus lived in a shabby exhibit of plywood, with limited opportunities for climbing and exploring. These are very arboreal primates, even more monkeys, and I could just about touch the ceiling when I stood on my tip toes. More importantly, he was alone, and these are some very social primates (seeing this species in the wild was my first hint of how unnaturally small the groups we keep many monkey species in really are). Now, sometimes an animal of a normally social species has to be kept alone for one reason or another – that animal’s particular behavior, medical concerns, etc. Maybe you are down to one individual of a species that you are going to phase out, and that animal is old so you don’t feel comfortable shipping it out, but you also don’t want to bring in more (this was the case for the Speke’s gazelle I described a few posts ago – the joke was on us, though, because the little guy was determined to live forever, or at least try to, out of spite). Fair enough. This animal was a perfectly healthy, fairly young, and, as far as I could tell, behaviorally competent. If we weren’t going to get another one (and getting another would have been fairly irresponsible, in my opinion, with the size and condition of our enclosure), we should have shipped this one out.
There was only a small indoor holding area – not much more than a closet – attached to the exhibit, and I never wanted to intrude on that, so the colobus and I shared space whenever I cleaned the exhibit. Quarters were tight – sometimes, I actually felt his tail brush against my face if he turned around suddenly – which is actually a little daunting, because those guys have some teeth on them, leaf-eaters be damned. He would calmly take a primate biscuit from my hand with an air of gravity and dignity, then retreat as far from me as he could to eat, while I tried to hide produce (mostly lettuce – again, leaf-eaters) as best as I could in a tiny, dingy little exhibit and pretend that it counted as enrichment.
My experiences with the second species were better, at least.
I worked with a pair of DeBrazza’s monkeys at another non-AZA zoo. The enclosure that they were in the same as those I described earlier for the galahs, king vulture, Andean condor, and ring-tailed lemurs at that facility – a wood and wire frame, mulch substrate, branches and stumps, and an attached indoor area heated with red bulbs; we had the ability to lock them into this stall in cold weather, defined as below freezing (though I’d often let them have access on days that were colder than that if it was sunny and felt warm – it was such a small space in there that I hated to have them cooped up if it wasn’t absolutely necessary). It wasn’t going to win any exhibit awards, but it was much better than what the colobus had, so it looked decent to me at the time.

I’ve often felt that DeBrazza’s are an ideal monkey for smaller zoos. Unlike many guenons, they’re naturally found in pairs quite often, instead of large troops, so it’s much easier to maintain a more natural social group (at other zoos, if you have just one male and one female guenon, the female can become quite stressed, as the male, hard-wired to exert his control over a harem of females, just has one girlfriend to devote his attention to, and can harass her constantly). And, true enough, our female DeBrazza – bearded, as the male was – was a fairly calm, sweet individual.
Of course, maybe she was allowed to be that way because the male was too focused on driving me crazy.
The male loved to play the game of tag. He’d ignore me completely as I serviced the exhibit, watching him out of the corner of my eye, until my attention would inevitably be distracted – a loud noise elsewhere, a visitor with a question, a radio call – and then he’d jump onto my back, then ricochet off before I could even react. He never tried to bite or do anything remotely aggressive – he just liked to jump on me and get a reaction, then bounce off to a high perch to look smugly at me as I glared at him.
Diet consisted of monkey chow in the morning. In the afternoon, I’d come by with a bucket of chopped produce that I’d spread out among the primates, parrots, warthogs, etc. I tried to scatter the produce as best as I could to allow both animals to get roughly even amounts (though I was not above handing a few special treats directly to the female). Otherwise, the male would grab as much as he could, as fast as he could, and stuff it into his cheeks for later.
One day, I saw a large, laughing crowd in front of the DeBrazza’s monkeys, which never struck me as a good sign. I hurried over just in time to see a glint of silver. Someone had thoughtfully tossed the monkeys a pocketful of change, and the male had a quarter in his mouth. Thinking to myself that I now knew how I was going to spend the rest of the afternoon, I went inside. After gathering up the rest of the coins, I set myself to the task of trying to get it away from him. Unfortunately, monkeys are smart, and while he didn’t particularly want the coin, he knew that I did, which gave him the upper hand. Climbing around the top of the exhibit, he worked his jaw repeatedly, stopping now and then to pull the quarter out, make sure that I could see it and admire it, and then tuck it back into his cheek pouches. Eventually, we came to an arrangement. I radioed for a coworker to bring me a banana (a major concession at that very-stingy zoo) and traded it to the monkey for the quarter… which I kept after he dropped it for me, perhaps the only time I’ve ever been tipped by one of the animals.
It was one of my fondest wishes at that zoo to breed the DeBrazza’s and I was excited when I saw our female start to get a little round. I was already set to transfer to another zoo, and it was a race between me and the baby to see if it would make it’s exit from the womb before I left the zoo. Unfortunately for me, I won that race. The female gave birth just a few days after I had packed up and left.





















