Central American Squirrel Monkey (Saimiri oerstedii), family Cebidae, Costa Rica
ENDANGERED.
photograph by Harry Collins

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Central American Squirrel Monkey (Saimiri oerstedii), family Cebidae, Costa Rica
ENDANGERED.
photograph by Harry Collins
Ecuadorian Squirrel Monkey Saimiri cassiquiarensis macrodon
It is found in the western Brazilian Amazon, as well as Colombia, Ecuador and Peru. It had been considered a subspecies of the Guianan squirrel monkey, Saimiri sciureus, but was elevated to a full species, S. macrodon, based on a 2009 study. Based on subsequent genetic research it was reclassified as a subspecies of Humboldt's squirrel monkey
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Common Squirrel Monkeys 🐒🐒🐒🐒
Saimiri
Guianan Squirrel Monkey (Saimiri sciureus) - (c) SaritaWolf - please do not repost
Intomysoul: wonderful I could cry 😭🪩🥹✨
It's always been magical to me, the hundred ways you can count to thirty, 0ne comes up and twenty-nine agree. From left to right, it fills the void
Maintains the circular motion of everything
Maintain the circular motion of everything
In my mind I'm a soundwave and I'm free, traveling for mars to Saturn, no more bound to what I used to be, nothing to explain to no one
We are already lost in space, an artificial ecosystem, the railways go back and forth, tirelessly, endlessly
Sustain in a circular motion of everything
They sustain a circular motion of everything ✨
Lost I (feat. Saimiri) by Hinkstep, Saimiri 🪩
In primates, kissing (in both homosexual and heterosexual contexts) can bear a startling resemblance to the corresponding human activity: a number of species such as Squirrel Monkeys and Common Chimpanzees engage in full mouth-to-mouth contact, while male Bonobos kiss each other with "passionate" open-mouthed kisses with considerable mutual tongue stimulation.
Two younger male Bonobos kissing
"Biological Exuberance: Animal Homosexuality and Natural Diversity" - Bruce Bagemihl