ZTL lists a few pure Chlorocebus as non-(sub)specific, they like to just lump entire populations with only a handful of pure holders as sensu lato as oppose to trying to actually work it out..
~Thylo
~Thylo
Golden Monkey Cercopithecus mitis kandti
Thanks, that is a brilliant photo!I have added a photo of this species/sub-species in the Uganda-wildlife gallery.
There are currently 235 photos in total in the thread, by 75 members.
You can take a bonus point if you like. But I get a bonus point for knowing where you are in the photo though!Are there bonus points available for being in one of the photos as well?
(You'll have to guess which.)
You can take a bonus point if you like. But I get a bonus point for knowing where you are in the photo though!
Lots of zoos have "S. entellus", but the multiple species were formerly all lumped under that one name. Hence the zoos' names cannot be taken as being the actual S. entellus.This says is a northern plain langur:
Grey langur (Semnopithecus entellus) - ZooChat
At Kaeng Krachan is T. o. flavicauda.I have a question in Kaeng Krachan national park what subspecies of dusky leaf langur is found?
A photo of one of these three species, the Raffles' Leaf Monkey Presbytis femoralis has recently been added to the gallery, with a photo taken in the wild in Singapore by @Casuarius_casuariusThis doesn't change the stats for the thread really, but a genetic study was just published wherein the three subspecies of Banded Leaf Monkey Presbytis femoralis were all elevated to full species: Faecal DNA to the rescue: Shotgun sequencing of non-invasive samples reveals two subspecies of Southeast Asian primates to be Critically Endangered species | Scientific Reports
The three species are the Raffles' Leaf Monkey P. femoralis, the Robinson's Leaf Monkey P. robinsoni, and the Sumatran Banded Leaf Monkey P. percura. Of the three species, only one was represented by a photo anyway (P. robinsoni) so the numbers haven't changed.
I neglected to mention an update for this post last year, where a photo of Trachypithecus phayrei had been uploaded by @Junklekitteb from the Bannerghatta Biological Park in India; on page two of the thread in this post: The Zoochat Photographic Guide to Old World PrimatesThere has been another recent primate split, where the Phayre's Langur Trachypithecus phayrei has become three species. The paper can be read here: Mitogenomic phylogeny of the Asian colobine genus <i>Trachypithecus</i> with special focus on <i>Trachypithecus phayrei</i> (Blyth, 1847) and description of a new species
The western form retains the name T. phayrei; the form in central Burma has been described as a new species, T. popa; and the eastern form (previously the subspecies T. p. shanicus) has been renamed T. melamera.
The only one of these depicted in the galleries is T. melamera, which is a bit annoying because until now every species of Trachypithecus was pictured in the thread.
Western Red Colobus Piliocolobus badius
Three subspecies: badius, temminckii, waldronae
The only photos in the Zoochat galleries are of museum specimens.
Photo below by @Sarus Crane at the Harvard Museum of Natural History, USA (taxidermy specimen)
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Western Red Colobus | ZooChat
That's great. I used two of those photos to replace the photo of the taxidermy animal.Just uploaded some photos of subspecies P. b temminckii in the The Gambia Wildlife Gallery ( Western red colobus - Piliocolobus badius temminckii - ZooChat , Western red colobus - Piliocolobus badius temminckii - ZooChat , Western red colobus - Piliocolobus badius temminckii - ZooChat , Western red colobus - Piliocolobus badius temminckii - ZooChat and Western red colobus - Piliocolobus badius temminckii - ZooChat ) so if you want to change the photo of the museum specimen for a photo of a living animal, you can choose yourself.
This species is probably the one I would have said was the most unlikely Old World primate to ever be represented in the Zoochat galleries (the list of the 50-odd unrepresented species is a few posts up, #144).