Atelidae
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
484
549
book chapter
3306
10.5281/zenodo.5727205
60d0954b-1201-4408-8492-1a762f592c33
5727205
8
.
Maranhao
Red-handed Howler
Alouatta ululata
French:
Hurleur du
Maranhao
/
German:
Maranhao-Briillaffe
/
Spanish:
Mono aullador de manos rojas del
Maranhao
Other common names:
Maranhao
Red-handed Howling Monkey
Taxonomy.
Alouatta ululata Elliot, 1912
,
Brazil
, Miritiba (= Humberto de Campos), northern
Maranhao
.
Formerly believed to be a subspecies of A.
belzebul
. Monotypic.
Distribution.
NE
Brazil
in remnant forest patches in the N of the states of
Maranhao
,
Piaui
, and
Ceara
, from the municipality of Humberto de Campos E to the Serra da Ibiapaba in the municipality of Corean;it is also found in the municipalities of
Ilha
Grande do Piaui, Caxing6, Campo Maior, and Jatoba do Piaui in the S of its range.
Descriptive notes.
Head-body of adult male type specimen 56-5 cm, tail 56 cm. No specific data are available for body weight. The
Maranhao
Red-handed Howler is sexually dichromatic. The male is black, with rufous to reddish brown hands and feet, tail tip and flanks. The female is yellowish-brown with sparse grayish hairs, giving an olivaceous appearance.
Habitat.
Patches of tall forest along the coast, semi-deciduous forests in the caatinga (dry forest scrub), transitional Babassu palm (Orbygnia) forests in
Maranhao
, and mangroves on the coast of Piaut and
Maranhao
.
Food and Feeding.
There is no information available for this species.
Breeding.
There is no information available for this species.
Activity patterns.
There is no information available for this species.
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
There is no information available for this species.
Status and Conservation.
CITES Appendix II. Classified as Endangered on The IUCN Red List. The
Maranhao
Red-handed Howler is classified as critically endangered on the Brazilian list of threatened species. It is the least studied of all howlers and occupies a region with a long history of human occupation and high levels of forest loss and hunting. Today, hunting is seen as the most serious threat. Surveys in 2004-2006 by staff of the Brazilian government's National Center for Research and Conservation of Brazilian
Primates
mapped 19 localities where
Maranhao
Red-handed Howlersstill survive in very small numbers. It is possible that it occurs on the Ubajara National Park that protects a narrow strip of forest on the eastern slopes of the Serra da Ipiapaba in
Ceara
. Populations of
Maranhao
Red-handed Howlers have been found in the environmental protection areas of Serra da Ipiapaba in
Ceara
and
Piaui
and Delta do Parnaiba that extends across
Piaui
and
Ceara
into
Maranhao
.
Bibliography.
Bonvicino et al. (1989), Gregorin (2006), Gregorin et al. (2008), Guedes et al. (2000), Hill (1962), Langguth et al. (1987), de Oliveira & Ferreira (2008), de Oliveira et al. (2007).