Cercopithecidae
Author
Russell A. Mittermeier
Author
Anthony B. Rylands
Author
Don E. Wilson
text
2013
2013-03-31
Lynx Edicions
Barcelona
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 3 Primates
550
755
book chapter
100956
10.5281/zenodo.6867065
3d520847-5163-4b5c-87bf-2cdceb781098
978-84-96553-89-7
6867065
61.
Roloway Monkey
Cercopithecus roloway
French:
Cercopitheque roloway
/
German:
Roloway-Meerkatze
/
Spanish:
Cercopiteco roloway
Other common names:
Roloway Guenon
Taxonomy.
Simia roloway Schreber, 1774
,
Guinea (West Africa).
Intermediate features between
C. roloway
and C.
diana
have been found near the Sassandra River, there the orange tones of the buttocks and inner thighs become deeper, but there is no intermediacy in the beard or brow band. C. rloway and C.
diana
comprise the
diana
species group. Monotypic.
Distribution.
SE Ivory Coast and SW Ghana, possibly Togo.
Descriptive notes.
Head-body 50-60 cm (males) and 42-45 cm (females), tail 85 cm (males) and 70 cm (females); weight 5-2 kg (males) and 3-9 kg (females).
The Roloway Monkey
closely resembles the
Diana Monkey
(C.
diana
) in appearance. Four main differences distinguish them: length and shape of beard (a much longer, pointed, and entirely white beard c.75 mm in length on
the Roloway Monkey
); color of inner thighs and pubic region (creamy-white to orangey-yellow on
the Roloway Monkey
vs. orangered on the
Diana Monkey
); prominence of a band of white hair across brow (more prominent and extending further on sides on
the Roloway Monkey
); and thickness of the white thigh stripe (
the Roloway
Monkey's is narrower than
Diana
Monkey's).
Habitat.
Primary and some secondary rainforest, gallery forest, and semi-deciduous forest near rivers.
The Roloway Monkey
has been much less intensively studied than the
Diana Monkey
, so fewer details of its habitat preferences (as well as ecology and behavior) are known, but they are presumed to have similar adaptations. The reported distribution of
the Roloway Monkey
also suggests that it may be able to occupy slightly drier and more seasonal forests than the
Diana Monkey.
The Roloway Monkey
is a high-canopy specialist like the
Diana Monkey.
Food and Feeding.
The only field study of the diet of
the Roloway Monkey
was done by S. Curtin in
Bia
National Park, western Ghana, in 1976-1977. The diet comprised pulp ofripe fruits (31%), insects (25%), seeds of ripe fruits (22%), leaf buds (7%), flower buds and flowers (6%), and unripe fruit (5%); seeds of unripe fruits, mature leaves, root nodes, and bulbs were eaten occasionally (less than 1%). In the dry season, the pulp of mature fruit (especially of lianas and vines) was the most important food, followed by insects and the seeds of ripe fruits. In the wet season, ripe fruits and insects were equally important. During the study, seeds (large and black with a red aril and especially rich in oils) of
Pycnanthus angolensis (Myristicaceae)
and small immobile insects on branches and foliage, most particularly in the large legume
Piptadeniastrum
africanum (
Fabaceae
), were the most important food items in terms of the time dedicated to eating them. Both trees were common at
Bia
. Diets of
Roloway
and
Diana monkeys
can vary greatly among populations, years, and even neighboring groups. Diets of
Roloway Monkeys
at
Bia
contained 24-3% ripe and unripe seeds (77% of them from
Pycnanthus
and
Funtumia
elastica,
Apocynaceae
) in contrast to the diets of
Diana Monkeys
from three field studies that contained only 0-11-6% seeds.
Pycnanthus
, like figs, produces fruits asynchronously, but it provides small quantities of fruits and seeds piecemeal over many months, unlike the mast fruiting of figs. The insect portion of the diet of
Roloway Monkeys
was similar to that of
Diana Monkeys.
Breeding.
There is no information available for this species.
Activity patterns.
Like the
Diana Monkey, Roloway Monkeys
are active, high canopy specialists. They are extraordinarily agile, foraging among terminal branches of emergent canopy trees and making acrobatic leaps to catch insect prey.
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
Projected similarities between
Roloway
and
Diana Monkeys
suggest that groups of
Roloway Monkeys
contain one adult male, several adult females, and young. Only one social group of
the Roloway Monkey
has been carefully studied: the group had 14-15 individuals (one adult male, six adult females, and young). It traveled 1-3 km/day in a home range of 190 ha. The group traveled further per day in the dry season than the wet season. Groups of
Roloway Monkeys
probably defend territories, although no specific information on territorial behavioris available.
Status and Conservation.
CITES Appendix I. Classified as Endangered on The IUCN Red List (as C.
diana
roloway
).
The Roloway Monkey
is listed as Class A in the African Convention on the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources. It originally occupied forests from the Sassandra River in western Ivory Coast to the Pra River in Ghana, and possibly extending into Togo. It was not found in Togo in recent primate surveys there. The most recent surveys indicate that it is more threatened than has been previously recognized; individuals have been reported at only one site, Tanoé Forest in Ivory Coast. If this is correct,
the Roloway Monkey
should be recognized as one of Africa’s most endangered primates, and it should accordingly be updated to critically endangered. Unconfirmed reports suggest that it might still hang on in very small numbers at Ankasa in Ghana; a thorough survey of Ankasa should be a high priority. The main threats to
the Roloway Monkey
include hunting and habitat degradation and loss. The loss of tall mature forest to logging and agriculture has not only degraded preferred habitat but also opened the forest up to commercial hunting for bushmeat. The relatively large size of
the Roloway Monkey
and the value ofits meat and skin make it a preferred game species. A couple of decades ago,
the Roloway Monkey
inhabited several parts of West Africa, including Krokosua Hills, Yoyo River, Boin River, and Draw River forest reserves, Ankasa Game Reserve, and Foret Classée de Yaya in Ivory Coast, and Dadieso Forest Reserve and Tanoé Forest in Ghana. Because of high human density around these areas,
the Roloway
Monkey's habitat has suffered one of the highest recent rates of deforestation in the world. Prior to this, Ghana's 300km*
Bia
National Park (the only site where
Roloway Monkeys
have been studied) was downgraded to a game production reserve. Logging concessions were granted in 1977, and the small remaining park area did not receive adequate protection; no
Roloway Monkeys
occur there anymore.
The Roloway Monkey
has been steadily extirpated from both unprotected and protected areas, and it is nearing extinction.
Bibliography.
Curtin (2002), Curtin & Olson (1984), Gatti (2010), Gonedelé Bi et al. (2008), Groves (2001, 2005b), Grubb et al. (2003), Kingdon (1997), Magnuson (2002), McGraw (1998a, 2007), McGraw & Oates (2007), Napier (1981), Oates (1988b, 1999, 2011).