identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03DB87CFFFD852702874FACDDB8CFD83.text	03DB87CFFFD852702874FACDDB8CFD83.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Cebus queirozi Pontes & Malta & Asfora 2006	<div><p>Cebus queirozi sp. nov. Mendes Pontes and Malta,</p><p>is being regularly followed in their small range. Due to extreme rarity and susceptibility no individual was sacrificed, the description being based on the analysis of a live holotype that was subsequently released, and on the resulting photographic documentation, as well as on the photograph of a paratype. This procedure follows the example of Jones et al. (2005) and Polaszek et al. (2005), which was based on Article 73.1.4 of the International Code of Zoological Nomeclature (International Commission on Zoological Nomeclature, 1999), which allows the description of new taxa without the need for dead type specimens. Herein we omit the coordinates to safeguard the species.</p><p>Holotype</p><p>Registered by A. R. Mendes Pontes and A. Malta on the 5 th February 2006 (Plates 1 to 4); after weighting and measuring the specimen, which was recovered from an unknown local hunter, it was released back to his group safely. We therefore, did not take invasive measures other than the ones mentioned. The Usina Salgado population is designated the source population for physical specimens in support of the holotype.</p><p>Age Sex / Class: Adult Male</p><p>Weight: 2.920 kg</p><p>Head­body: 40 cm</p><p>Tail: 41 cm</p><p>Foot: 12 cm</p><p>Ear: 2.9 cm</p><p>Additional to the standard measures we also took:</p><p>Tibia: 15.3 cm</p><p>Femur: 12 cm</p><p>Manus: 8.4 cm</p><p>Antibrachium: 11.6 cm</p><p>Brachium: 12.5 cm</p><p>Paratype</p><p>Sub­adult individual (Plate 5). Sex not known. Picture taken in the Montrichardia linina swamp, Usina Salgado, State of Pernambuco.</p><p>Type locality</p><p>Lowland tropical rainforest and Montrichardia linina swamps of the Usina Salgado, Municipality of Ipojuca, State of Pernambuco, Brazil. The only known population to date.</p><p>Diagnosis</p><p>Body hair comprises a uniformly golden­yellow mantle, including hind and forelimbs. Hands and feet are black. Rectangular snow­white cap in the front half of the head (as in the paratype, but faded in the holotype), going down to just above the ears. Tail uniformly golden, darker than the rest of the body in the dorsal part.</p><p>Geographic distribution</p><p>Possibly restricted to this single group, at Usina Salgado, a population at the very brink of extinction, confirmed by a 5­year survey of 23 areas, including the largest and best preserved Coimbra forest (3.600 ha) not far from the site. Further surveys along the Atlantic coast of the Pernambuco Endemism Centre (possibly the former distributional range of the species), at the north­eastern sector of the Atlantic forest of Brazil, are critically needed to locate other viable populations to guarantee the future of the new critically­endangered species.</p><p>Habitat</p><p>The blond capuchin is now restricted to three very small forest patches, one measuring 13.4 ha, another 19.6 ha, and a third only 6 ha, which totals 39 ha of highly­modified and disturbed secondary forest, defined as lowland tropical rainforest. They are connected by a 161­ha swamp formed by stands of Montrichardia linina (Araceae) of up to 5 metres high, which are used as corridors between the forest patches and also, and most importantly, as refuge against intruders, an entire home range of about 200 ha. They are highly threatened by selective cutting, intentional fires, presence of domestic animals, hunting, and even tourists from a nearby resort, despite constant, and now intensified, patrolling of the area by the landowners, who also committed themselves to reforest a considerable area surrounding their home range.</p><p>Description</p><p>General Aspect: A primarily golden monkey, with light brown eyes, and a snow­white cap. (1) Dorsally: uniformly golden (including shoulders), with the lower parts (at the height of the rump) slightly darker. (2) Ventrally: uniformly golden, with the lower parts darker (in the groin), with the fur growing from a mid­ventral line along the chest and belly towards the sides. (3) Forelimbs: uniformly golden, with the inner parts darker and with less fur. (4) Hind limbs: uniformly golden, with the inner parts darker and with less fur. (5) Hands and feet: black, furless in the palm only. The fur that covers hands and feet are much lighter than the rest. (6) Tail: carried parallel to the plane of the back when travelling, with the distal half coiled. (7) Face and forehead: pinkish, with some dark patches, sparsely covered with golden short fur (longer in the forehead just below the cap, and around the mouth). (8) Cheeks: masseter muscle well developed giving the impression of swollen cheeks. Skin flabby, with folds hanging (possibly due to age of the holotype, an old male). In the outer part of the cheeks a vertical line of fur grows upwards to meet the white cap, just above the ears. (9) Neck: furless in this individual exclusively, with accentuated pendulous, darkly­pigmented skin, a throat flap. (10) Ears: black, covered by long golden fur. (11) Head: front half is formed by the white cap, and the back half is golden, but darker than the rest of the body. (12) Cap: snow­white in the front half of the head, divided in the middle. Fur growing backwards, and not erect (not tufted).</p><p>Etymology</p><p>The specific name acknowledges the Queiroz family of landowners for having protected this region known to keep a population of blond monkeys for more than 30 years, for having taken the initiative to invite the authors to look for this species in the area in order to start a scientifically­based conservation programme, and for having spontaneously decided to start a reforestation project to enlarge the forest area available.</p><p>Discussion</p><p>The characteristics of the blond capuchin, Cebus queirozi sp. nov. here presented, which are basically a uniformly golden­yellow mantle, and a snow­white cap, differ significantly from those listed by Torres de Assunção (1988) apud Rylands et al. (2005) for animals from North­eastern Brazil, which are: (1) ventral hairs yellowish brown, (2) flanks occasionally greyish brown, (3) cap occasionally brown, and (4) a diffuse dorsal stripe. Additionally, they also differ from the other species for being much smaller, head­body measure of the adult alpha male being only 40 cm.</p><p>The blond capuchin also differs significantly from Cebus apella, as it is described in Emmons and Feer (1997) and Eisenberg and Redford (1999) for North­eastern Brazil, due to the latter possessing (1) a crown covered with a black or dark­brown cap that extends down cheeks as a distinct dark bar in front of ears, (2) hairs of cap that form short tufts above ears, (3) tail that is black or brown, and (4) hind limbs brown and darker than the body.</p><p>It differs significantly from the different specimens of the Cebus apella group deposited at the National Museum of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (specimen No. 24314, from Fonte Boa, AM, Brazil), and at the Museum of the University of São Paulo — MZUSP (specimen No. 2743, 2883, from Mintiba, Amazonas, Brazil; No. 3848, 3851, 3849, from Bahia, Brazil; No. 6325, from rio Aricá, Mato Grosso, Brazil; No. 4262, from Cuiabá, Mato Grosso, Brazil; No. 6321, no locality; No. 6967, 6972, 7040, from rio das Mortes, Mato Grosso, Brazil; No. 3362, from Corumbá, Mato Grosso, Brazil; No. 3771, from Coxim, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil; No. 5133, from rio Arapiuns, Pará, Brazil).</p><p>It also differs significantly from the other species deposited at the National Museum of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and Museum of the University of São Paulo — MZUSP, especially from the two species that have a distribution that is nearest to this one (Figure 1), which are:</p><p>Cebus libidinosus libidinosus, that occurs along the left bank of the São Francisco river, and presents (1) a black or dark brown crown, (2) dark brown tail, and (3) distal parts of hind and forelimbs dark brown (National Museum of Rio de Janeiro — specimens No. 23321, 23320, 23309, 23311, 23316, 23310, 23315, 23313, 23314, 23312, 23317, 23318, 23319, all from Serrita municipality, State of Pernambuco, Brazil; No. 4838, from Anápolis, Goiás, Brazil; No. 23254, from Goiás, Brazil; No. 23243, 23242, 23235, all from Itajuí, Bahia, Brazil; No. 23237, from Cariranha, Bahia, Brazil; MZUSP — specimens No. 2365, 2364, both from Rio Araguaia, Goiás, Brazil; No. 10642, from Goiania, Goiás, Brazil). The well­preserved and described museum material allowed us to compare the standard measures of C. libidinosus (Head­body: Mean 76 cm ± 4.5; Tail: Mean 42.7 cm ± 1.8; Foot: Mean 12 cm ± 0.6, and Ear: Mean 2.4 cm ± 0.4, n=14), with those of Cebus queirozi sp. nov., which suggests that although length of tail, foot, and ear do not differ significantly, the latter is probably much smaller.</p><p>Cebus xanthosternos, which occurs in the south of the Pernambuco Endemism Centre, in the State of Bahia, and possibly Espirito Santo and Rio de Janeiro, and presents (1) dark brown or blackish head, (2) hindlimbs, (3) forelimbs, and (4) tail, and also (5) laterally the body is darker than the rest (National Museum of Rio de Janeiro — specimens No. 23225, 23223, 23224, all from Itamarají, Bahia, Brazil; MZUSP — specimens No. 2582, 2585, both from Senhor do Bonfim, Bahia, Brazil). No standard measures were available for comparisons.</p><p>Thus, we fully recognise Cebus queirozi sp. nov. Mendes Pontes and Malta as a new species, possibly endemic to the different types of tropical rainforest of the Atlantic coast of the Pernambuco Endemism Centre, which encompasses the Brazilian States of Pernambuco, Paraíba, Alagoas and Rio Grande do Norte, and propose their inclusion in the Brazilian and in the international lists of endangered species, as critically endangered.</p><p>The discovery of this new critically­endangered (overlooked for centuries) species of capuchin within this zone of endemicity (sensu Prance, 1982, 1987, Silva and Casteletti, 2003), where 23 species of endemic birds have already been described, as well as one species of reptile, four species of butterflies, two species of gastropods, at least four species of amphibians, and at least 11 species of trees (http://www.cepan.org.br/Centro de Endemismo Pernambuco), highlights the overwhelming importance and uniqueness of this highly­threatened area for the conservation of the earth’s biota. It also points to the great lack of information on its mammalian fauna, and the urgent need for surveys in order to understand their distribution and status throughout the region.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DB87CFFFD852702874FACDDB8CFD83	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Pontes, Antonio Rossano Mendes;Malta, Alexandre;Asfora, Paulo Henrique	Pontes, Antonio Rossano Mendes, Malta, Alexandre, Asfora, Paulo Henrique (2006): A new species of capuchin monkey, genus Cebus Erxleben (Cebidae, Primates): found at the very brink of extinction in the Pernambuco Endemism Centre. Zootaxa 1200 (1): 1-12, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.1200.1.1
