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
103.
Tshuapa Red Colobus
Piliocolobus tholloni
French:
Colobe de Thollon
/
German:
Thollon-Stummelaffe
/
Spanish:
Colobo rojo del Congo
Other common names:
Thollon's Red Colobus
Taxonomy.
Colobus tholloni Milne-Edwards, 1886
,
Democratic Republic of Congo, Lower Congo.
Modern taxonomic arrangements of the colobus monkeys either divide the red colobus and the Olive
Colobus
into two genera,
Piliocolobus
and
Procolobus
, respectively, or consider them to belong to one genus,
Procolobus
, with two subgenera (
Procolobus
for the Olive
Colobus
and
Piliocolobus
for the red colobus). We follow here C. P. Groves in his publications of 2001 and 2007 in using two genera. Monotypic.
Distribution.
DR Congo E of the Congo River and S of the great bend of the river, the E limit is not the Lualaba Riveritself, but rather the Lomami River, and bounded by the Kasai and Sankuru rivers in the S.
Descriptive notes.
Head-body c.64 cm (males) and 58-60 cm (females), tail c.63 cm (males) and 41-69 cm (females); no specific data are available for body weight. On the basis of only three specimens, the Tshuapa Red
Colobus
seems to be a rather large species, with a very short tail.
Fur
is uniformly foxy-red above, although somewhat darker on shoulders and tail, and creamy-white below. Crown is light bay to mahogany. Circumfacial hair is short and black, with only posterior parts of cheeks light-colored like underparts. Legs are orange-rufous, paler than arms, and hands, feet, and tail tip are dark to black. There are long black tufts at the base ofthe tail. Hairs at the sides ofthe tail-base develop into along “panache” (tuft). Face is slaty, with a trace of pale on eyelids and lips. Ischial callosities are pink or slaty. Like other East Central African red colobus, mtDNA analysis shows unexpected heterogeneity; specimens from the same locality show very divergent mitochondrial lineages. Skull of the Tshuapa Red
Colobus
is distinctively long and narrow, small-toothed, and very prognathous, with a large sagittal crest, which is more extensive than in other forms.
Habitat.
Lowland flooded moist primary rainforest.
Food and Feeding.
The Tshuapa Red
Colobus
eats mostly young leaves, but seeds can be a substantial part of its diet.
Breeding.
The female Tshuapa Red
Colobus
displays a substantial pink sexual swelling during the periovulatory period.
Activity patterns.
The Tshuapa Red Colobusis diurnal and arboreal.
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
The Tshuapa Red
Colobus
has never been studied in the wild and very little is known about it. Groups of more than 60 individuals have been reported.
Status and Conservation.
CITES Appendix II. Classified as Near Threatened on The IUCN Red Lust (as
Procolobus rufomitratus
tholloni
). The Tshuapa Red Colobusis believed to have undergone a population decline on the order of 20-25% over the last three generations, due mainly to intensive hunting (particularly during the period of the Congo War, 1996-2003). Habitat loss for timber and agricultural land likely affects some populations locally. Further research into hunting may reveal that the Tshuapa Red
Colobus
could qualify as Vulnerable, especially because it is more heavily hunted than many of the other primates in the Congo Basin. It occurs in Salonga National Park and Tayna Gorilla Reserve in DR Congo.
Bibliography.
Groves (2001, 2007b), Grubb et al. (2003), Maisels et al. (1994).