Quick facts

Video Byte: Golden Monkeys

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Class: Mammalia (Mammals)
Order: Primates
Families:
Callitrichidae (marmosets and tamarins)
• Cebidae (New World monkeys)
• Cercopithecidae (Old World monkeys)
Genera: 37
Species: 196
Size: largest—baboon Papio sp., head and body length up to 3.6 feet (1.1 meters); smallest—pygmy marmoset Cebuella pygmaea, head and body length 4.6 to 6 inches (12 to 15 centimeters)
Weight: largest—baboon, up to 80 pounds (36 kilograms); smallest—pygmy marmoset, 3 to 5 ounces (85 to 140 grams)
Life span: from 10 to 50 years, depending on species
Number of young: 1 or 2 for Old and New World monkeys; 1 to 3 for marmosets and tamarins
Gestation: from 4 to 8 months, depending on species
Size at birth: largest—baboon, 21 to 31 ounces (600 to 900 grams); smallest—pygmy marmoset, 0.5 to 0.9 ounces (14 to 27 grams)
Age of maturity: 18 months to 8 years, depending on species
Conservation status: many at critical risk including southern muriqui Brachyteles arachnoides, black-faced lion tamarin Leontopithecus caissara, and Tonkin snub-nosed monkey Rhinopithecus avunculus.

Fun facts

Howler monkeys Alouatta sp. are the loudest monkeys—their deep, howling calls can be heard almost 2 miles (3 kilometers) through the forest and more than 3 miles (5 kilometers) over open areas like lakes. The males call to announce their territory to other troops.
Vervet monkeys Cercopithecus aethiops have different alarm calls to identify different predators, such as eagles, pythons, and leopards.
Patas monkeys Erythrocebus patas can run on the ground at up to 31 miles (50 kilometers) per hour, making them the fastest primate on land.
• Among leaf-eating colobus monkeys, like the Angolan black-and-white colobus Colobus angolensis, burping is a friendly social gesture. Their four-chambered stomachs digest leaves by bacterial fermentation, which produces lots of gas.
• Some monkeys can swim, like De Brazza's guenons Cercopithecus neglectus, Allen’s swamp monkeys Allenopithecus nigroviridis, and proboscis monkeys Nasalis larvatus. They may swim across a stream or river to avoid predators or get to food, and Allen’s swamp monkeys even "go fishing” by laying leaves or grass on top of the water, and grabbing fish that come to hide underneath.
Japanese macaques Macaca fuscata live in parts of Japan where it snows. These are the monkeys you may have seen on TV that find hot springs, and spend a lot of time in the winter sitting in the warm water—kind of like a macaque Jacuzzi!®

See them

San Diego Zoo: Children’s Zoo, Sun Bear Forest, Ituri Forest, and Monkey Trails and Forest Tails
Wild Animal Park: Heart of Africa

More

• Animal Bytes: Pygmy Marmoset
Conservation Research: Asian Leaf-eating Primates as Umbrella Species for Conservation; Behavioral Associations in Old World Monkeys: An Aid to Captive Management
Kid Territory: Marvelous Monkey Muffins; Monkey Puppet; All Thumbs; A Balancing Act; Agile Acrobats
Blogs: Deiriai the Swamp Monkey

Sound Byte:

Listen to a monkey!

Endangered Primate Rescue Center (EPRC), Vietnam

Visiting the San Diego Zoo and the Wild Animal Park helps to support our partnership with the EPRC in Vietnam. Along with rescuing animals from the pet trade, the food market, and other peril, the rescue center protects and conserves Vietnam's 24 types of primates and their cousins, the prosimians. The goals of the center are scientific study, education efforts within local communities, and enhancing the wild population through managed breeding and reintroduction of animals into the wild. In 1997, the work of the EPRC in Vietnam resulted in the discovery of a new species, the grey-shanked douc langur.

2008 monkey conservation

Our Asia Regional Conservation Program is expanding our understanding of leaf-eating monkeys, particularly odd-nosed monkeys. Field observations are revealing their social organizations, mating behaviors, and life histories. We also plan to create an in situ animal rescue facility for Yunnan snub-nosed monkeys. Education and outreach programs will raise local awareness for primate conservation.

Mammals: Monkey

Range: Old World monkeys are found in Africa, central to southern Asia, Japan, and India
Habitat: rain forest, islands, steppes, mountains, and savanna, depending on species

Range: New World monkeys are found in Mexico and Central and South America
Habitat: tropical rain forest

Range: marmosets and tamarins are found in Central and South America
Habitat: tropical rain forest and scrubland

A barrel of monkeys

Monkeys have many different adaptations, depending on their habitat. Most are arboreal. Others, like macaques Macaca sp. and baboons Papio sp., are more terrestrial. All monkeys can use their hands and feet for holding on to branches, but some arboreal monkeys can use their tails, too. Tails that can grab and hold are called prehensile. These special tails are ridged on the underside and very flexible, so much so that they can grab a tree branch or pick up something as small as a peanut! Prehensile tails come in handy for holding on while the monkey collects food: flowers, fruits, nuts, leaves, seeds, insects, birds’ eggs, spiders, and small mammals.

Monkeys at the San Diego Zoo and the Wild Animal Park are offered a variety of fruits and vegetables, special herbivore biscuits, and a variety of leafy branches to munch on.

Old World or New World?

Monkeys are found in two main regions of the world, so they are grouped by scientists into either Old World monkeys or New World monkeys. Old World monkeys are found in Africa and Asia. Some examples are guenons Cercopithecus sp., mangabeys Cercocebus sp., macaques, baboons, and colobus Colobus sp. monkeys. New World monkeys are found in Mexico, Central America, and South America. Some examples are woolly monkeys Lagothrix sp., spider monkeys Ateles sp., howler monkeys Alouatta sp., capuchin monkeys Cebus sp., and squirrel monkeys Saimiri sciureus. Marmosets and tamarins also live in the New World, but are in a different scientific grouping from the other New World monkeys.

There are a few characteristics that are different between the Old World and New World monkeys:

NosesMost Old World monkeys have small curved nostrils set close together. Most New World monkeys have round nostrils set far apart.

Cheek pouches Macaques and some of the other Old World monkeys have cheek pouches, which are used to stuff food into on the run so it can be chewed later. New World monkeys don’t have cheek pouches.

Rump padsSome Old World monkeys, such as drills, have sitting pads on their rumps, but New World monkeys do not.

Tails Some New World monkeys, such as spider monkeys, have prehensile tails, but Old World monkeys do not.

pygmy marmoset father with youngBaby life

Groups of monkeys, called troops, travel together to find food. Infants are helpless at birth, so they get rides by clinging to their mothers. When the troop is not traveling, monkey babies are very active, spending much of their waking hours playing. Playing helps young monkeys develop physical and social skills they need for adult life.


Read my lips

Monkeys are very social animals, so it is important that they communicate well in order to get along in their large groups. They use vocalizations, facial expressions, and body movements to get their messages across. Staring, for instance, is a threat. Monkeys look down or away to avoid threatening other monkeys, thus preventing fights. Loud vocalizations can mean "stay out—this is my territory.” Using vocalizations instead of fighting is a much safer way to communicate.

Grinning, or pulling the lip up to show the teeth, may seem like a smile to us. But for monkeys this is a sign of aggression or anger, because biting is one way monkeys fight and defend themselves. Other signs of aggression include head bobbing, yawning (again, to show the teeth), and jerking the head and shoulders forward.

Monkeys also express affection and make peace with others by grooming each other. Although grooming helps monkeys keep their fur clean of dirt, dead skin, and parasites, it also helps them to build and maintain good social relationships. Grooming seems to be a way to make up after fighting, or to make friends with other troop members.

Helping monkeys survive

Unless human behavior changes, monkeys have an uncertain future. Many live in areas where people live. Monkeys are often considered pests by farmers and are killed. Some are killed for their fur and for meat, which is known as bushmeat. Monkeys are also trapped and sold as pets. People need to remember that monkeys are wild animals, and they do not make good pets. They are loud, messy, difficult to care for, and can be aggressive. Monkeys can also become very sick from not getting the right food, and they lead unhappy and short lives from not living in the right conditions.

The biggest threat to monkeys is habitat loss. Many monkeys live in tropical forests, a habitat that is quickly disappearing. You can help protect monkeys and monkey habitat! Do not buy anything made from monkey body parts. Be careful about buying items made from rain forest trees, unless that wood is certified. Some rain forest products, such as Brazil nuts, actually help protect monkey habitat, because they can only be harvested from healthy rain forests. This type of product usually has a label describing how it helps protect the rain forest. Read the labels! Recycling and buying recycled products also helps save all animal habitats by reducing the amount of resources we take from the Earth.