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BBC News website, 19 May 05
New African monkey discovered
By Helen Briggs BBC News science reporter

National Geographic News website, 19 May 05
New Monkey Species Discovered in East Africa
By John Roach for National Geographic News

Scientists have discovered a new monkey species in the mountains of East Africa. The new primate, known as the highland mangabey (Lophocebus kipunji), was identified by two independent research teams working in separate locations in southern Tanzania.

The teams describe the species—a medium-size, long-tailed tree dweller—in tomorrow's issue of the academic journal Science. Fewer than a thousand highland mangabeys exist, researchers estimate.

They say they expect that a formal census of the primate's population will land the species on the World Conservation Union's "critically endangered" list.

Except for their furry off-white bellies and tails, highland mangabeys are covered in thick brown fur. The thick coats are an adaptation to the primate's mountain habitat, where temperatures can drop below freezing, researchers say. The species lives at elevations up to 8,000 feet (2,438 meters). The monkeys have black eyelids, faces, hands, and feet. Researchers have yet to directly measure a highland mangabey. But scientists say the primates are about 3 feet (90 centimeters) tall and sport tails of similar length.

Tim Davenport, a Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) biologist based in Mbeya, Tanzania, led a team that discovered the monkeys. The team found the mangabeys on the flanks of Tanzania's 9,700-foot (2,961-meter) Rungwe volcano and in the adjoining Kitulo National Park.

"A number of things distinguish it [as a distinct species]," he said. "But the key one above all is the call." As adults, the monkeys emit a loud, low-pitched "honk-bark," which is significantly different from calls made by any other primate, Davenport said. In addition, the monkey's fur color and upright crest of hair on its head help distinguish it as a unique species, said Trevor Jones, a research biologist at Udzungwa Mountains National Park in Mang'ula, Tanzania. "As soon as I saw its fur color and upright crest—which is very striking, probably the first thing you notice when you get a good look at it—I knew it was different and probably new," he said.

Together with field assistant Richard Laizzer—and completely independently of Davenport's group—Jones found a highland mangabey population in the Ndundulu Forest Reserve in the Udzungwa Mountains.

Genus Identification

The monkey species is definitely new to science, said Colin Groves, a biological anthropologist at the Australian National University in Canberra and an expert in the often contentious field of primate classification. "The only question is whether it is correctly referred to the genus Lophocebus," Groves wrote in an e-mail to National Geographic News. "This, however, was the best option that the authors had until they could come up with some more complete material, especially a voucher [mounted and preserved] specimen."

There are two genera of mangabey, the genus Cerocebus and the genus Lophocebus. (Genus is the classification just above species.) Cerocebus mangabeys are most closely related to the large baboons called mandrills, have pink or white eyelids that contrast with their black face color, and spend at least some of their time on the ground. Lophocebus are most closely related to other baboons, have black eyelids that are the same color as their faces, and spend most of their time in trees.

Jones, Davenport, and colleagues place the highland mangabey with the genus Lophocebus primarily because of the species' noncontrasting black eyelids and tree-dwelling nature. Given the likely critically endangered status of the highland mangabey, the researchers have not captured an individual for detailed scientific analysis, nor do they plan to.

Stunning Find

Researchers say they are stunned by their find. Tanzania is considered one of the most biologically well-known African countries. Davenport, the WCS biologist, said discovering a medium-size monkey new to science there demonstrates how little humans actually know. "If two or three years ago someone discovered a new species of monkey in an African country, Tanzania would be near the bottom of the list for guessing which country it's most likely to be in," he said.

Jones, the Udzungwa Mountains National Park-based research biologist, added: "In a way, finding a monkey in Tanzania, to me, makes it more likely that other species might turn up, for example in the Congo Basin. And it really highlights the fact that there is still so much to learn in the 21st century." Groves, the Australian biological anthropologist, said he too was "extremely surprised" to learn about the discovery.

Monkey Sleuthing

Together with WCS colleagues Noah Mpunga, Sophy Machaga, and Daniela De Luca, Davenport first observed the highland mangabey in the southern highlands of southwest Tanzania in May 2003. He said scientists and conservationists have largely ignored the region, believing that it contained little of interest in terms of large animals.

The WCS researchers were there, in part, to test that notion. While interviewing members of a local tribe, the Wanyakyusa, in January 2003, the researchers learned of a shy monkey known as the kipunji. Real and mythical forest animals populate the tribe's oral traditions. That's why it took the researchers several months to validate the rumors of a new monkey species previously unknown to Western science.

The team confirmed the species's existence only after the May 2003 sighting and a subsequent sighting in December of that year, according to their account in Science. Davenport said he is uncertain how long the Wanyakyusa have known about the highland mangabey, "but they certainly had a name for it—kipunji." In recognition of the Wanyakyusa's likely generations-long knowledge of the species, kipunji is the second half of the species's scientific name.

Meanwhile, Jones first observed the highland mangabey last July, while serving as the field director on a project to study the critically endangered Sanje mangabey in the Udzungwa Mountains. That study was led by Carolyn Ehardt, an anthropologist at the University of Georgia in Athens.

It was Ehardt, together with Thomas Butynski of Conservation International in Nairobi, Kenya, who subsequently confirmed that the species was new to science.

At the time of discovery, Jones was following up on reports from ornithologists of a population of Sanje mangabeys in the region. What he found turned out to be something entirely different. "As soon as I laid eyes on it, I was gobsmacked," Jones said. "I was a little off balance and grabbed onto my assistant to stop me from falling over. Then I put my binoculars back on the animal and stared in disbelief."

Researchers say the highland mangabey eluded recognition by the outside world until now for a host of factors. These include the monkey's low number, restricted range, shyness, and remote location. "They're [forest] canopy animals," Jones said. "And the canopy is very tall, up to 50 meters [164 feet]. They hear you coming and can disappear before you get a good look at them."

Call for Conservation

The researchers estimate that the highland mangabey population in both the Udzungwa Mountains and southern highlands of Tanzania total no more than a thousand individuals. While small, the Udzungwa Mountains population is protected by its isolation. It is "about a day and a half walk from the village at the end of the road, and it takes a long time to get to the end of the road," Jones said.

He will return to the Ndundulu Forest Reserve later this year to continue research on the Udzungwa population, including a detailed assessment of potential long-term threats to the species.

The outlook for the southern highland populations is much more serious, according to Davenport, who says highland mangabeys there are at immediate risk. The area's forest is severely fragmented due to logging and other forms of resource extraction, he said, and the species is hunted for the meat.

"I know every conservationist says that, but the point is this is true," he said. "We are optimistic, or at least hope, that this sort of discovery will help people realize this is an important area."

BBC News website, 19 May 05
New African monkey discovered
By Helen Briggs BBC News science reporter

A previously unknown monkey species has been found in the mountains of southern Tanzania. The animal is believed to be a critically endangered species, with no more than perhaps a thousand individuals remaining. The highland mangabey, as it is called, lives in the trees and is thought to be closely related to the baboon family. Full details of the discovery were revealed on Thursday in the journal Science.

Tom Butynski was one of the first scientists to track down the secretive monkey. He said it was a great thrill to be only the second or third primatologist to see the animal. "Your mouth drops open and a big smile appears on your face," he told the BBC News Website. "You say 'wow'!"

Surprise find

Dr Butynski was part of a US research team visiting the Ndundulu Forest Reserve to investigate sightings of the Sanje mangabey, a rare "cousin" of the new species. Unbeknown to them, a different team of researchers working a few hundred kilometres away in the southern highlands of Tanzania was also on the animal's trail.

"These monkeys have probably been there for hundreds of thousands of years," said Dr Butynski. "What are the chances of two independent projects finding the animal within a 10-month period?"

The other research group, led by Tim Davenport of the New-York-based Wildlife Conservation Society, had been searching the area for many months after hunters spoke of seeing a strange animal known locally as the Kipunji.

They finally spotted the monkey last year. "This discovery proves that there is still so much to learn about the more remote and less well-known areas of Tanzania, and Africa as a whole," said Dr Davenport.

Survival threat


The existence of such a large mammal living out of sight for so long has astounded biologists. It is more than two decades since the last discovery of a new African monkey. Russell Mittermeier, of IUCN - The World Conservation Union, said it demonstrated how little we knew about our closest living relatives, the non-human primates. "A large, striking monkey in a country of considerable wildlife research over the last century has been hidden right under our noses," he said.

The highland mangabey (Lophocebus kipinji) is brown with a distinctive soft "honk-bark" call. It lives as high as 8,000ft (2,450m) above sea level and has long fur to withstand the cold.

Scientists believe there are two or more populations living in forests near the Udzungwa Mountains National Park. But with so few individuals are left, they fear its future is in jeopardy.

Some of the monkey's habitat has been destroyed by illegal logging, prompting calls for the area to be better protected by expanding the boundaries of the national park.

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