- Grey-cheeked Mangabey
Taxobox
name = Grey-cheeked MangabeyMSW3 Groves|pages=160]
status = LC
status_system = iucn3.1
status_ref = IUCN2006|assessors=Butynski "et al"|year=2000|id=12309|title=Lophocebus albigena|downloaded=12 May 2006]
regnum =Animal ia
phylum =Chordata
classis =Mammal ia
ordo =Primate s
familia =Cercopithecidae
genus = "Lophocebus "
species = "L. albigena"
binomial = "Lophocebus albigena"
binomial_authority = (Gray,1850 )The Grey-cheeked Mangabey ("Lophocebus albigena") is an
Old World monkey found in theforest s ofCentral Africa . They range fromCameroon down toGabon . The Grey-cheeked Mangabey is a dark monkey, looking in shape overall like a small, hairybaboon . Its thick brown fur is almost black in its forest home, with a slightly rufus/golden mane around the neck. The sexes are similar, with the males slightly larger than the females.The Grey-cheeked Mangabey lives in a variety of habitats with the forests of Central Africa, it is generally thought to live in either swamp or primary forests, in some areas it has also been found in secondary forest as well. Some authors in the past have considered the species to be restricted to the forest canopy, however more recently habituated troops have been observed on the forest floor collecting food. It feeds primarily on fruit, particularly figs of the genus "
Ficus ", taking other fruits seasonally, as well as shoots, flowers and insects.The Grey-cheeked Mangabey lives in groups of between 5 to 30 individuals. The groups have either a single male or (more usually) several, without a single dominant male. Young males leave the troop once they are adult and join other troops, whereas the females stay in the troop of their birth. If troops become too large they may split. Confrontations between troops are rare, as this
mangabey will usually avoid other troops. Their territories cover several square miles of forest, and can both overlap with other troops and shift over time.Three subspecies of this mangabey were previously recognized. In
2007 ,Colin Groves elevated them all to species level, splitting one ("johnstoni") into two species. [cite journal | author = Groves, Colin | title = The Endemic Uganda Mangabey, "Lophocebus ugandae", and Other Members of the "albigena"-Group ("Lophocebus") | year = 2007 | journal = Primate Conservation | volume = 22 | url = http://arts.anu.edu.au/grovco/Uganda%20mangabey.pdf]References
External links
* [http://www.livescience.com/animalworld/060619_monkey_meteorologists.html Even Monkeys Can Be Meteorologists]
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