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UGA professor takes part in discovery of new primate in the mountain forests of Tanzania
Writer: Philip Lee Williams, 706/542-8501, phil@franklin.uga.edu
Contact: Carolyn L. Ehardt, 706/542-1480 or 706/340-2023, cehardt@uga.edu
May 20, 2005, 10:39 Email this article
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| Africa's newly discovered species of monkey, the Highland Mangabey Lophocebus kipunji: frontal and three-quarters view of the head. Note characteristic broad, upright crest on head and non-contrasting eyelids. Artist's reconstruction from research video taken in Ndundulu Forest of Udzungwa Mountains, and in the Southern Highlands, Tanzania, by C. L. Ehardt. Credit: Zina Deretsky, National Science Foundation. |
Athens, Ga. – A University of Georgia anthropologist is part of an effort that has discovered the first new monkey species found in Africa since 1984. Two research projects working independently in East Africa each discovered the “highland mangabey,” one in the Ndundulu Forest of the Udzungwa Mountains of Tanzania and the other in the Southern Highlands, 350 kilometers to the southwest.
UGA primatologist Carolyn Ehardt is director of the project that produced the discovery in the Udzungwas, where she has been conducting conservation research over the last decade.
Ehardt’s codiscovery was published in today’s issue of the journal Science. The codiscoverers include researchers from the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) and Conservation International (CI).
“To discover a completely new species of monkey in this part of Africa is phenomenal,” said Ehardt, whose research has been funded by the National Science Foundation, WCS and other conservation donor agencies. “There is a strong message here. Not only is so much of the world’s biodiversity severely threatened, but we still do not know what fascinating and important species may be lost before they can be discovered. A finding such as this can only encourage us to redouble our research and conservation efforts.”
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| Full-body view of Lophocebus kipunji Ehardt et al. 2005 sp. nov. Note long fur, coat color, lighter area on chest and distal tail, as well as characteristic tail carriage. Artist's reconstruction from research video taken in Ndundulu Forest of Udzungwa Mountains, and in the Southern Highlands, Tanzania, by C. L. Ehardt. Credit: Zina Deretsky, National Science Foundation. |
Although Ehardt’s early research focused on issues of social organization in captive groups of monkeys at the Field Station of the Yerkes Regional Primate Research Center in Georgia, she is now concentrating on the ecology and conservation of endangered primates and working at several field sites. Her primary current site is the Udzungwa Mountains of Tanzania, where there are a number of threatened primates. The Udzungwas are part of the Eastern Arc mountain “archipelago,” an area of East Africa recognized as a critically important biodiversity “hotspot.”
The Udzungwas are the last remaining place in East Africa with contiguous forest zone from roughly 250m to 2600m elevation. There are a number of endemic primates in the Udzungwa forests, including the Sanje mangabey, the Udzungwa red colobus and a recently discovered species of nocturnal dwarf galago.
With a strange call the researchers describe as a “honk-bark” and dramatic tufts of its brown hair sprouting from the sides and top of its head, the highland mangabey is not only rare, it is unique.
Dwelling in the trees of two Tanzanian forests – at altitudes up to 2.5 kilometers (1.5 miles) above sea level – the highland mangabeys are a hearty lot, enduring temperatures as low as -3° Celsius (27° Fahrenheit) and seasonal rainfall that can total nearly 3 meters (9.5 feet).
From field observations and detailed photographic and audio recordings, the scientists have concluded that the highland mangabey is a little under 1 meter (3 feet) long – 2 meters (6.5 feet) including tail – and has long, brown fur (white on its chest and tail) and black skin.
The highland mangabey’s arboreal nature and black face with noncontrasting eyelids are characteristic of one of two known mangabey genera, Lophocebus, the mangabey genus most closely related to baboons. It is believed by the researchers to number no more than a few hundred animals and will be classified as critically endangered because of its limited distribution and the severe threats to its forest habitat.
The new species was first sighted by WCS conservation biologists back in 2003 during a survey led by Tim Davenport on and around Mt. Rungwe, in the Southern Highlands of Tanzania. Hunters from surrounding Wanyakyusa villages had spoken of a shy monkey that they called “kipunji,” and the team caught their first glimpse of the new monkey in May.
With no knowledge of the WCS team’s discovery in the Southern Highlands, researchers from UGA, CI and the local national park were studying primates in the Udzungwa Mountains in 2004 as part of Ehardt’s research on the conservation ecology of the critically endangered Sanje mangabey – a relation of the new monkey but in the other mangabey genus, Cercocebus. One of the goals of her project was to survey Ndundulu and acquire data for Sanje mangabey groups previously reported to be in this forest by ornithologists working in the region.
“My concern was that our previous surveys in Ndundulu had not produced any further sightings of the Sanje mangabey, which raised even more worry about its already dire conservation status,” said Ehardt.
It was in preparation for intensive work in Ndunduku that the highland mangabey was discovered in this forest and then identified as a new species by Ehardt and her CI colleague Tom Butynski. It was then only in the process of preparing the publication on the discovery that Ehardt learned, completely by chance, of Davenport’s parallel discovery in the quite distant Southern Highlands. The research teams then pooled their observations to craft a more complete picture of the animal, which they have named Lophocebus kipunji in recognition of the local name used in the Southern Highlands.
The Southern Highlands team was coordinated and funded by WCS; the project that produced the discovery in Ndundulu Forest received financial support from WCS, CI, the Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund, the Margot Marsh Biodiversity Fund, Primate Conservation, Inc., the Primate Action Fund, the University of Georgia Research Foundation and the Office of the Dean of the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences at UGA, the National Science Foundation, and the Primate Society of Great Britain.
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Note: While Philip Lee Williams of UGA contributed to this story, it was largely written by Joshua Chamot of the National Science Foundation. Because of the nature of this joint project, NSF, the Wildlife Conservation Society and Conservation International all generated press stories. Additional details and stories that cover the background of other agencies can be found on their Web sites.
Additional contacts follow.
Research Contacts: * Ehardt’s contact information is at the top of this press release
* Tim Davenport, Director, Southern Rift and Southern Highlands Conservation Programs, Wildlife Conservation Society, Mbeya, Tanzania, +255 25 2503541, tdavenport@wcs.org
* Tom Butynski, Director, Eastern Africa Biodiversity Hotspots, Conservation International, +254-2-3745374, TButynski@aol.com
Media Contacts: * Josh Chamot, NSF, 703/292-7730, jchamot@nsf.gov
* Tom Cohen, Conservation International, 202/912-1532, tcohen@conservation.org
* Stephen Sautner, Wildlife Conservation Society, Bronx Zoo, New York, 718/220-3682, ssautner@wcs.org
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