Colombian white-faced capuchin (Cebus capucinus), family Cebidae
Dierenpark De Oliemeulen, taken September 2024
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Colombian white-faced capuchin (Cebus capucinus), family Cebidae
Dierenpark De Oliemeulen, taken September 2024
So I’m analyzing the data I have right now (pretty much quantifying behaviors that I recorded in voice recordings) and I would like you all to know that on Saturday, March 16th at 2:02 pm Steve, Bucky, Loki, Natasha, and Peter were all hanging out with each other in a mango tree
No more monkeyin' around! Only two pages remain in former Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Director Martin H. Moynihan's white-throated capuchin field notes, shared by Smithsonian Institution Archives and the Field Book Project. Join us for insights into Cebus Capucinus behavior... like Hostile Patterns (!) and defensive posturing - and help wrap up these notes for use by researchers.
White Faced Capuchin // Costa Rica
Tortuguero. Costa Rica 2014.
Cute white-faced capuchin baby.
Tortuguero. Costa Rica 2014.
Precioso bebe de capuchino de cara blanca.
Take aim at the left cheek!
Word is that Ernesto has the best aim of any creature alive. He hit me with a peanut in the left face cheek today when I was raking up their refuse. Still, the loveliest bunch of coconuts I have had the privilege of meeting. Ernesto was once a "pet" in a private home in Las Vegas. He came to Jungle Friends with his best friend Hayley when their "owner" realized (after plastic surgery and many stitches) what awful house guests monkeys are (they live in trees, you know). These two were lucky enough to end up here where they have huge spaces, trees!, and, most importantly, the loving faces of other monkeys to keep them company for the rest of their very long lives. White-headed capuchins live in groups as big or bigger than twenty and they can live for over fifty years! Are you sure you want to take care of that cute little face for the next five decades of your life..? Best just to leave them in the jungles of Central America if you ask me. Yes, monkeys ARE still taken from the wild and sold as pets AS WELL as bred in cages on "farms." This business is such nonsense. FREEDOM FOR ALL!! Also, I saw a weeper capuchin named ChiChi doing bicycle kicks. FREEDOM FOR ALL!!
Kpu1 - Cebus capucinus