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Callithrix pygmaea (Spix, 1823)Pygmy marmoset; Jacchus pygmaeus |
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Callithrix pygmaea
They are active and agile creatures, running, jumping, and occasionally leaping among trees and shrubs. These little monkeys move quadrupedally through the trees in an upright position. Their forelimbs are shorter than their hind limbs and they often feed while clinging upright to a trunk or branch with their sharp claws. They have claws on all digits except the big toe, which has a flat nail. Their cryptic coloration and small size, along with movements that include squirrel-like dashes, sloth-like oozing over tree trunks and abrupt and frozen stillness can make them quite difficult for predators to see.
Social Structure
Communication
Basic calls include:
Reproduction and Development
The dominant female is the only member of the group that produces offspring. The presence of an adult female may suppress ovulation in other female members of the family. Gestation lasts 4.5 months. After the first 24 hours, young are most often carried by the adult male or juveniles and returned to the adult female for nursing. This practice relieves the energy drain on the mother and gives siblings practice for parenthood. At birth the young weigh approximately .5 ounces (15 g). An individual nurses until about three months and is sexually mature by one to 1.5 years. They generally reach adult size by age two. Juveniles usually stay with the group through two subsequent birth cycles.
Life Span
Diet in the Wild
Gums are particularly important for pygmy marmosets because their home ranges are so small that they cannot rely on fruit year round. As an adaptation for gnawing, marmosets have long, forward turned, lower incisors that are the same length as their canines; this is the case in all marmosets and is termed the short-tusked condition. (Tamarins, another group of small monkeys, have lower canines that are longer than their lower incisors.) They also have two molars as opposed to three in most other monkeys.
Conservation
The main predators of the pygmy marmoset are birds of prey. These monkeys are flexible and adapt to environmental changes caused by humans. For example, they have been found living in small groups of trees on the edges of farms that have been created by clear cutting. They have also been known to use secondary forest habitats if there is suitable food available. Page Controls
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