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<paragraph id="FE3336D2FFB0FFE6FD32FB09FB85FB71" blockId="27.[737,1123,1204,1227]" box="[737,1123,1204,1227]" pageId="27" pageNumber="28">
<heading id="A57B81BEFFB0FFE6FD32FB09FB85FB71" box="[737,1123,1204,1227]" centered="true" fontSize="9" level="2" pageId="27" pageNumber="28" reason="2">
<taxonomicName id="398C4D51FFB0FFE6FD32FB09FB85FB71" ID-CoL="PQG3" authority="(Thomas, 1904)" baseAuthorityName="Thomas" baseAuthorityYear="1904" box="[737,1123,1204,1227]" class="Mammalia" family="Callitrichidae" genus="Callimico" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="27" pageNumber="28" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="goeldii">
<emphasis id="CCF8EAC0FFB0FFE6FD32FB09FC44FB71" box="[737,930,1204,1227]" italics="true" pageId="27" pageNumber="28">Callimico goeldii</emphasis>
(
<bibRefCitation id="9A1D4B23FFB0FFE6FC60FB08FBBDFB71" author="Thomas, O." box="[947,1115,1205,1227]" pageId="27" pageNumber="28" pagination="188 - 196" refId="ref60340" refString="Thomas, O. 1904. New Callithrix, Midas, Felis, Rhipidomys, and Proechimys from Brazil and Ecuador. Annals and Magazine of Natural History (ser. 7) 14: 188 - 196." type="journal article" year="1904">Thomas, 1904</bibRefCitation>
)
</taxonomicName>
</heading>
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="FE3336D2FFB0FFE6FD6BFB5DFBE1FB42" blockId="27.[667,1194,1248,1565]" box="[696,1031,1248,1272]" pageId="27" pageNumber="28">VOUCHER MATERIAL: None.</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="B6966559FFB0FFE1FD6BFB43FE33FDDD" lastPageId="28" lastPageNumber="29" pageId="27" pageNumber="28" type="description">
<paragraph id="FE3336D2FFB0FFE6FD6BFB43FB6CFAD7" blockId="27.[667,1194,1248,1565]" pageId="27" pageNumber="28">
UNVOUCHERED RECORDS: Nuevo
<collectingRegion id="3C48F830FFB0FFE6FBAEFABDFD35FA89" country="Argentina" name="San Juan" pageId="27" pageNumber="28">San Juan</collectingRegion>
(D.W. Fleck, unpublished), Río Blanco (Izawa, 1979), Santa Cecilia (
<bibRefCitation id="9A1D4B23FFB0FFE6FBC1FA87FD30FAD4" author="Hershkovitz, P." pageId="27" pageNumber="28" refId="ref53999" refString="Hershkovitz, P. 1977. Living New World monkeys (Platyrrhini), with an introduction to Primates. Vol. 1. Chicago: University of Chicago Press." type="book" year="1977">Hershkovitz, 1977</bibRefCitation>
), Tapiche (
<bibRefCitation id="9A1D4B23FFB0FFE6FC8AFAE5FB99FAD7" author="Jorge, M. L. S. P. &amp; P. M. Velazco" box="[857,1151,1367,1389]" pageId="27" pageNumber="28" pagination="196 - 204" refId="ref55238" refString="Jorge, M. L. S. P., and P. M. Velazco. 2006. Mammals. In C. Vriesendorp et al. (editors). Peru: Sierra del Divisor (Rapid Biological Inventories 17): 196 - 204. Chicago: Field Museum." type="journal article" year="2006">Jorge and Velazco, 2006</bibRefCitation>
).
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="FE3336D2FFB0FFE6FD6BFACEFB4FF9A7" blockId="27.[667,1194,1248,1565]" pageId="27" pageNumber="28">
IDENTIFICATION: No specimen of
<taxonomicName id="398C4D51FFB0FFE6FBBAFAC9FCC9FA13" baseAuthorityName="Thomas" baseAuthorityYear="1904" class="Mammalia" family="Callitrichidae" genus="Callimico" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="27" pageNumber="28" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="goeldii">
<emphasis id="CCF8EAC0FFB0FFE6FBBAFAC9FCC9FA13" italics="true" pageId="27" pageNumber="28">Callimico goeldii</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
is known from the Yavarí-
<collectingRegion id="3C48F830FFB0FFE6FD48FA0DFD13FA7C" box="[667,757,1456,1478]" country="Peru" name="Ucayali" pageId="27" pageNumber="28">Ucayali</collectingRegion>
interfluve, but a skin and skull from Contayo (on the left bank of the upper Río Tapiche; AMNH 98281)
<superScript id="09F99B9AFFB0FFE6FC09FA59FC02FA48" attach="left" box="[986,996,1508,1522]" fontSize="6" pageId="27" pageNumber="28">8</superScript>
agrees in all qualitative external and craniodental charac-
</paragraph>
<footnote id="9D972ADCFFB0FFE6FD63F9F2FBEEF964" pageId="27" pageNumber="28">
<paragraph id="FE3336D2FFB0FFE6FD63F9F2FBEEF964" blockId="27.[667,1193,1615,1758]" pageId="27" pageNumber="28">
<superScript id="09F99B9AFFB0FFE6FD63F9F2FD5EF9E1" attach="right" box="[688,696,1615,1627]" fontSize="5" pageId="27" pageNumber="28">8</superScript>
We have not found Contayo on any recent map, but it appears at about
<geoCoordinate id="9BB85015FFB0FFE6FCFAF9D1FC82F9C4" box="[809,868,1643,1663]" degrees="7" direction="south" minutes="04" orientation="latitude" pageId="27" pageNumber="28" precision="15" seconds="9" value="-7.0691667">
7
<emphasis id="CCF8EAC0FFB0FFE6FCE7F9D6FCDAF9C4" bold="true" box="[820,828,1643,1662]" italics="true" pageId="27" pageNumber="28">°</emphasis>
04
<emphasis id="CCF8EAC0FFB0FFE6FC82F9D6FCBEF9C4" bold="true" box="[849,856,1643,1662]" pageId="27" pageNumber="28">9</emphasis>
S
</geoCoordinate>
,
<geoCoordinate id="9BB85015FFB0FFE6FCBDF9D6FC5AF9C5" box="[878,956,1643,1663]" degrees="74" direction="west" minutes="14" orientation="longitude" pageId="27" pageNumber="28" precision="15" seconds="9" value="-74.23583">
74
<emphasis id="CCF8EAC0FFB0FFE6FC50F9D6FC6DF9C4" bold="true" box="[899,907,1643,1662]" italics="true" pageId="27" pageNumber="28">°</emphasis>
14
<emphasis id="CCF8EAC0FFB0FFE6FC72F9D6FC4EF9C4" bold="true" box="[929,936,1643,1662]" pageId="27" pageNumber="28">9</emphasis>
W
</geoCoordinate>
on the 1938 Loreto sheet of the American Geographic Societys 1:1,000,000 series. Like other vanished settlements that were once scattered along the upper Tapiche, Contayo may have been populated by itinerant rubber tappers at the time of Basslers visit.
</paragraph>
</footnote>
<paragraph id="FE3336D2FFB7FFE1FF53FF68FE33FDDD" blockId="28.[128,654,213,1759]" pageId="28" pageNumber="29">
ters with published descriptions of the species (
<bibRefCitation id="9A1D4B23FFB7FFE1FF5BFF4FFEDCFEBD" author="Thomas, O." box="[136,314,242,264]" pageId="28" pageNumber="29" pagination="188 - 196" refId="ref60340" refString="Thomas, O. 1904. New Callithrix, Midas, Felis, Rhipidomys, and Proechimys from Brazil and Ecuador. Annals and Magazine of Natural History (ser. 7) 14: 188 - 196." type="journal article" year="1904">Thomas, 1904</bibRefCitation>
,
<bibRefCitation id="9A1D4B23FFB7FFE1FE83FF4FFE6CFEBD" author="Thomas, O." box="[336,394,242,263]" pageId="28" pageNumber="29" pagination="130 - 136" refId="ref60414" refString="Thomas, O. 1913. On some rare Amazonian mammals from the collection of the Para Museum. Annals and Magazine of Natural History (ser. 8) 11: 130 - 136." type="journal article" year="1913">1913</bibRefCitation>
;
<bibRefCitation id="9A1D4B23FFB7FFE1FE4CFF4FFD64FEB2" author="Hershkovitz, P." box="[415,642,242,264]" pageId="28" pageNumber="29" refId="ref53999" refString="Hershkovitz, P. 1977. Living New World monkeys (Platyrrhini), with an introduction to Primates. Vol. 1. Chicago: University of Chicago Press." type="book" year="1977">Hershkovitz, 1977</bibRefCitation>
). The collector, Harvey Bassler (a petroleum geologist;
<bibRefCitation id="9A1D4B23FFB7FFE1FF25FE90FE6CFEF9" author="Myers, C. W." box="[246,394,301,323]" pageId="28" pageNumber="29" pagination="1 - 232" refId="ref56697" refString="Myers, C. W. 2000. A history of herpetology at the American Museum of Natural History. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 252: 1 - 232." type="journal article" year="2000">Myers, 2000</bibRefCitation>
), recorded no external measurements, and the skull has been bisect- ed longitudinally for anatomical study; as a result, transverse cranial measurements cannot be taken. However, other craniodental dimensions of this specimen, including condyloincisive length (CIL, 41.0 mm) and length of the maxillary toothrow (C1M3, 15.4 mm) are within the published range of variation for
<taxonomicName id="398C4D51FFB7FFE1FECCFD8EFE07FDF0" baseAuthorityName="Thomas" baseAuthorityYear="1904" box="[287,481,563,586]" class="Mammalia" family="Callitrichidae" genus="Callimico" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="28" pageNumber="29" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="goeldii">
<emphasis id="CCF8EAC0FFB7FFE1FECCFD8EFE07FDF0" box="[287,481,563,586]" italics="true" pageId="28" pageNumber="29">Callimico goeldii</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
(see
<bibRefCitation id="9A1D4B23FFB7FFE1FDF3FD89FF12FDDC" author="Hershkovitz, P." pageId="28" pageNumber="29" refId="ref53999" refString="Hershkovitz, P. 1977. Living New World monkeys (Platyrrhini), with an introduction to Primates. Vol. 1. Chicago: University of Chicago Press." type="book" year="1977">Hershkovitz, 1977</bibRefCitation>
: appendix
<tableCitation id="B30E0369FFB7FFE1FEA6FDECFE2EFDDD" box="[373,456,593,615]" captionStart="TABLE 2" captionStartId="15.[303,385,214,233]" captionTargetBox="[93,590,315,649]" captionText="TABLE 2 Craniodental Measurements (mm) of Alouatta seniculus from the Yavarí-Ucayali Interfluve" httpUri="http://table.plazi.org/id/AAF3665AFFA4FFF2FEFCFF6BFDA4FEA3" pageId="28" pageNumber="29" tableUuid="AAF3665AFFA4FFF2FEFCFF6BFDA4FEA3">table 2</tableCitation>
).
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="B6966559FFB7FFE1FF4FFDD0FCF3FE0D" pageId="28" pageNumber="29" type="discussion">
<paragraph id="FE3336D2FFB7FFE1FF4FFDD0FDF2FCD5" blockId="28.[128,654,213,1759]" pageId="28" pageNumber="29">
REMARKS: No other western Amazonian callitrichine is completely black, so unvouchered reports by competent observers have high credibility. Our sighting at Nuevo
<collectingRegion id="3C48F830FFB7FFE1FDB1FD7AFF5EFD40" country="Argentina" name="San Juan" pageId="28" pageNumber="29">San Juan</collectingRegion>
(of a small troop moving through secondary vegetation close to the ground on the right bank of the Río Gálvez) was unambiguous, and several other sight records from the region seem trustworthy.
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="FE3336D2FFB7FFE1FF4EFCC5FDB4FAB0" blockId="28.[128,654,213,1759]" pageId="28" pageNumber="29">
Izawa (1979: 5) reported that
<taxonomicName id="398C4D51FFB7FFE1FDF3FCCAFD6BFC34" authorityName="Miranda Ribeiro" authorityYear="1912" box="[544,653,887,910]" class="Mammalia" family="Callitrichidae" genus="Callimico" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="28" pageNumber="29" phylum="Chordata" rank="genus">
<emphasis id="CCF8EAC0FFB7FFE1FDF3FCCAFD6BFC34" box="[544,653,887,910]" italics="true" pageId="28" pageNumber="29">Callimico</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
occurs as a relatively high population from the head to the upper basin of the Río Blanco, a [right-bank] tributary of the Río Tapiche. Izawa also observed
<taxonomicName id="398C4D51FFB7FFE1FE46FC51FDE4FBB9" authorityName="Miranda Ribeiro" authorityYear="1912" box="[405,514,1004,1027]" class="Mammalia" family="Callitrichidae" genus="Callimico" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="28" pageNumber="29" phylum="Chordata" rank="genus">
<emphasis id="CCF8EAC0FFB7FFE1FE46FC51FDE4FBB9" box="[405,514,1004,1027]" italics="true" pageId="28" pageNumber="29">Callimico</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
along the upper Río Tapiche, but did not specify on which bank(s) his observations were made. (Additional information from Izawas primatological survey of the Tapiche-Blanco is apparently available in a Japanese-language publication that we have not seen [
<bibRefCitation id="9A1D4B23FFB7FFE1FD93FB20FF5AFB75" author="Izawa, K." pageId="28" pageNumber="29" pagination="6 - 13" refId="ref55018" refString="Izawa, K. 1978. A preliminary survey of uacari and Goeldi's monkey in Rio Tapiche, Peru. Monkey 22: 6 - 13 [in Japanese; not seen]." type="journal article" year="1978">Izawa, 1978</bibRefCitation>
]). Recently, however,
<bibRefCitation id="9A1D4B23FFB7FFE1FE6AFB07FF2FFB57" author="Jorge, M. L. S. P. &amp; P. M. Velazco" pageId="28" pageNumber="29" pagination="196 - 204" refId="ref55238" refString="Jorge, M. L. S. P., and P. M. Velazco. 2006. Mammals. In C. Vriesendorp et al. (editors). Peru: Sierra del Divisor (Rapid Biological Inventories 17): 196 - 204. Chicago: Field Museum." type="journal article" year="2006">Jorge and Velazco (2006)</bibRefCitation>
reported
<taxonomicName id="398C4D51FFB7FFE1FEE9FB6BFE41FB57" authorityName="Miranda Ribeiro" authorityYear="1912" box="[314,423,1238,1261]" class="Mammalia" family="Callitrichidae" genus="Callimico" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="28" pageNumber="29" phylum="Chordata" rank="genus">
<emphasis id="CCF8EAC0FFB7FFE1FEE9FB6BFE41FB57" box="[314,423,1238,1261]" italics="true" pageId="28" pageNumber="29">Callimico</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
at an inventory site on the right bank of the upper Tapiche.
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="FE3336D2FFB7FFE1FF4EFAAFFE26F965" blockId="28.[128,654,213,1759]" pageId="28" pageNumber="29">
<bibRefCitation id="9A1D4B23FFB7FFE1FF4EFAAFFE2BFA92" author="Hershkovitz, P." box="[157,461,1298,1320]" pageId="28" pageNumber="29" refId="ref53999" refString="Hershkovitz, P. 1977. Living New World monkeys (Platyrrhini), with an introduction to Primates. Vol. 1. Chicago: University of Chicago Press." type="book" year="1977">Hershkovitz (1977: 928)</bibRefCitation>
attributed the Santa Cecilia sighting to the late Pekka Soini, whose correspondence (dated
<date id="8A321012FFB7FFE1FE34FAF0FD60FAD9" box="[487,646,1357,1379]" pageId="28" pageNumber="29" value="1970-06-28">28 June 1970</date>
) is still preserved in the FMNH Division of Mammals archives. In fact, Soini did not explicitly mention Santa Cecilia, but stated that
<taxonomicName id="398C4D51FFB7FFE1FF64FA7CFE9FFA62" baseAuthorityName="Thomas" baseAuthorityYear="1904" box="[183,377,1473,1496]" class="Mammalia" family="Callitrichidae" genus="Callimico" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="28" pageNumber="29" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="goeldii">
<emphasis id="CCF8EAC0FFB7FFE1FF64FA7CFE9FFA62" box="[183,377,1473,1496]" italics="true" pageId="28" pageNumber="29">Callimico goeldii</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
seems to be definitely known … to some natives along the Maniti river. Santa Cecilia is a small community on the right (east) bank of the lower Manití (
<bibRefCitation id="9A1D4B23FFB7FFE1FF5BF98AFE6BF9F7" author="Robbins, M. B. &amp; A. P. Capparella &amp; R. S. Ridgely &amp; S. W. Cardiff" box="[136,397,1591,1613]" pageId="28" pageNumber="29" pagination="145 - 159" refId="ref58208" refString="Robbins, M. B., A. P. Capparella, R. S. Ridgely, and S. W. Cardiff. 1991. Avifauna of the Rio Maniti and Quebrada Vainilla, Peru. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 143: 145 - 159." type="journal article" year="1991">Robbins et al., 1991</bibRefCitation>
), a site where Soini might plausibly have interviewed local informants. Subsequent primate census work along the Río Manití, however, has not produced additional records of this elusive species (
<bibRefCitation id="9A1D4B23FFB7FFE1FF33F974FE55F965" author="Tapia, J. &amp; F. Encarnacion &amp; R. Aquino &amp; L. Moya &amp; P. Soini" box="[224,435,1737,1759]" pageId="28" pageNumber="29" pagination="325 - 341" refId="ref60241" refString="Tapia, J., F. Encarnacion, R. Aquino, L. Moya, and P. Soini. 1990. Censos poblacionales y sacas periodicas de primates en la Amazonia peruana. In N. E. Castro-Rodriguez (editors). La primatologia en el Peru. Investigaciones primatologicas (1973 - 1985): 325 - 341. Lima: Proyecto Peruano de Primatologia '' Manuel Moro Sommo. ''" type="book chapter" year="1990">Tapia et al., 1990</bibRefCitation>
).
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="FE3336D2FFB7FFE1FD09FF6EFCF3FE0D" blockId="28.[701,1228,211,439]" pageId="28" pageNumber="29">ETHNOBIOLOGY: A few Matses talk about a monkey called sipi çhëşhë black tamarin, which is said to be different from tamarins, extremely rare, all black (including the area around its mouth), and to forage on the ground and very close to the ground. However, most Matses have never seen this species.</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
</treatment>
</document>