New Primate Discovered in Mountain
Forests of Tanzania
"Highland mangabey" is first African monkey to be described in more than
two decades
May 19, 2005
Two research teams working independently in Tanzania have discovered a
monkey that had eluded scientists despite decades of research in the
region. The "highland mangabey" is the first monkey species to be
described in Africa since 1984.
The entire known range for the highland mangabey totals a mere 28 square
miles (73 square kilometers). Due to the combined threats of logging,
charcoal-making, poaching and excessive removal of forest resources, this
rare animal is at great risk of extinction, and the researchers estimate
only a few hundred of the monkeys remain.
The co-discoverers--researchers from the Wildlife Conservation Society
(WCS), the University of Georgia (UGA) and Conservation International
(CI)--describe the mangabey in the May 20, 2005, issue of the journal
Science.
With a strange call the researchers describe as a "honk-bark" and dramatic
tufts of brown hair sprouting from the sides and top of its head, the new
species is not only rare, it is unique.
"To discover a completely new species of monkey in this part of Africa is
phenomenal," says UGA primatologist and co-discoverer Carolyn Ehardt.
"There is a strong message here: not only is so much of the world's
biodiversity severely threatened, but we still do not know what
fascinating and important species may be lost before they can be
discovered. A finding such as this can only encourage us to redouble our
research and conservation efforts," says Ehardt.
Dwelling in the trees of two Tanzanian forests--up to 1.5 miles (2.5
kilometers) above sea level--the highland mangabeys are a hearty lot,
enduring temperatures as low as 27° Fahrenheit (-3° Celsius) and seasonal
rainfall that can total nearly 8.2 feet (2.5 meters). From field
observations and detailed photography, the scientists have concluded that
the highland mangabey is a little under 3-feet (1-meter) long--6.5 feet
(2-meters) including tail--has long, brown fur, an off-white chest and
tail, and black skin. The highland mangabey's arboreal nature and
uniformly black face and eyelids are characteristic of one of two mangabey
genera, Lophocebus, which is most closely related to baboons.
The species was first discovered by WCS conservation biologists in 2003
during surveys led by Tim Davenport on and around Mt. Rungwe and the
Livingstone Forest of the new Kitulo National Park in the Southern
Highlands of Tanzania. Hunters from surrounding Wanyakyusa villages had
spoken of a shy monkey that they called "kipunji," and the team caught
their first glimpse of the monkey that May. The researchers also recorded
the monkey's distinctive "honk-bark" - information that proved vital in
confirming the species' status.
"The Mt. Rungwe-Livingstone forests have huge biological, economic and
cultural value but have been largely left off the conservation map," says
Davenport. "It is our hope that this discovery will not only remedy this
and help reshape biogeographical thinking, but also demonstrate the urgent
need for conservation action across the severely threatened habitats of
the Southern Highlands," says Davenport.
Almost 220 miles (350 kilometers) northeast of Mt. Rungwe in the Udzungwa
Mountains, researchers from UGA, CI and the Udzungwa Mountains National
Park were studying primates independently in the Ndundulu Forest. The
expedition was part of Ehardt's NSF-supported research on the conservation
and ecology of the critically endangered Sanje mangabey - a relation of
the highland monkey but in the genus Cercocebus.
In the 1990s, a team of Danish ornithologists was working in Ndundulu and
reported seeing groups of Sanje mangabeys. One of the goals of Ehardt's
project was to survey Ndundulu and collect demographic data on those
monkeys.
"My concern was that previous visits to Ndundulu had not produced any
further sightings of Sanje mangabeys, which raised even more worry about
its already dire conservation status," says Ehardt.
In July of 2004, Trevor Jones--then Ehardt's primary field assistant and
the lead author on the Science report--made a preliminary visit to
Ndundulu. Armed with mapped locations of previous sightings provided by
ornithologists Lars Dinesen and Tom Lehmberg, Jones and another field
assistant, Richard Laizzer, spotted monkeys for sure, but they were not
Sanje mangabeys. Jones and Laizzer assumed the animals were a previously
known species of monkey, just not yet reported in Tanzania. It was upon
their arrival in Ndundulu that Ehardt and CI's Tom Butynski identified the
creatures as a previously unidentified species of mangabey.
"It was therefore out of concern for the critically endangered Sanje
mangabey that the project led to the completely unexpected discovery of
yet another critically endangered mangabey," says Ehardt. "The Udzungwa
Mountains represent an amazing biodiversity 'hotspot,' and this remarkable
discovery affirms the region's status as one of the most important for
primate conservation in Africa."
Only through the process of preparing the publication on the discovery did
Ehardt learn, quite by chance, of Davenport's parallel discovery in the
Southern Highlands. The research teams then pooled their observations to
craft a more complete picture of the animal, which they have named
Lophocebus kipunji in recognition of the local name for the tree-dweller
in the Southern Highlands.
"With the discovery of the highland mangabey, the Ndundulu Forest now has
three powerful 'flagship species,'" says Butynski. The other two species
are birds discovered by the Danish ornithologists: the rufous-winged
sunbird discovered in 1981, and the Udzungwa forest partridge, a new genus
discovered in 1991.
"The Ndundulu Forest is critical to the long-term survival of all three
threatened species. As such, it is imperative that the western boundary of
the Udzungwa Mountains National Park be extended westwards to include all
of the Ndundulu Forest," he adds.
The researchers have located only 13 highland mangabey groups, three of
them in the Ndundulu Forest. This mangabey is one of three threatened
monkey species that researchers have identified in the Udzungwas, a
testament to the biologically rich but fragile ecosystems of the region.
"Virtually all nonhuman primate species are being pushed to their limits,"
says Mark Weiss, the NSF program officer who oversees Ehardt's research.
"One can only hope that the excitement of new scientific finds such as
this one will transmit the need to act to ensure the survival of these
animals." |