Biology:Angwantibo

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Short description: Genus of primates

Golden pottos[1]
ArctocebusCalabarensisWolf.jpg
Calabar angwantibo, Arctocebus calabarensis
Scientific classification e
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Primates
Suborder: Strepsirrhini
Family: Lorisidae
Subfamily: Perodicticinae
Genus: Arctocebus
Gray, 1863
Type species
Perodicticus calabarensis
J. A. Smith, 1860
Species

Arctocebus calabarensis
Arctocebus aureus

Angwantibos are two species of strepsirrhine primates classified in the genus Arctocebus of the family Lorisidae. They are also known as golden pottos because of their yellow or golden coloration.

Angwantibos live in tropical Africa and their range includes Nigeria, Cameroon north of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Angwantibos grow to a size of 22 to 30 cm, and have almost no tail at all. They only weigh up to 0.5 kg. Their fur is yellow brown to golden in color. Their snout is more pointed than that of the other lorids and this, along with their round ears, gives it the bear-like appearance that lends them their name in German: Bärenmaki, "bear lemur".

Solitary, nocturnal and arboreal, they prefer the underbrush and the lower layers of the forests. They spend the day hidden in the leaves. Like all lorisids they are characterized by slow movements.

The diet of angwantibos consists predominantly of insects (mostly caterpillars), and occasionally fruits. Owing to their careful movements and their good sense of smell, they can quietly stalk and close-in on their prey and catch it with a lightning-quick movement.

The males mate with all available females whose territory overlaps with theirs.[citation needed] Copulation takes place hanging onto a branch.[2] Gestation lasts 130 days and births are of a single offspring. The juvenile clasps itself first to the belly of the mother and later she may park her offspring on a branch while she goes searching for food. Within three to four months the young are weaned, at about six months it leaves its mother, and at an age of eight to ten months it becomes fully mature. The life expectancy of angwantibos is at most 13 years.[citation needed]

A subplot in Gerald Durrell's first book The Overloaded Ark centres on his attempts to secure an angwantibo for zoological study.

Species

Genus ArctocebusGray, 1863 – two species
Common name Scientific name and subspecies Range Size and ecology IUCN status and estimated population
Calabar angwantibo

Drawing of brown loris

A. calabarensis
(Smith, 1860)
Western equatorial Africa
Map of range
Size: 22–31 cm (9–12 in) long, plus 4–10 cm (2–4 in) tail[3]

Habitat: Forest[4]

Diet: Insects, as well as fruit and gum[3]
 NT 


Unknown Population declining[4]

Golden angwantibo A. aureus
de Winton, 1902
Western equatorial Africa
Map of range
Size: 22–26 cm (9–10 in) long, plus vestigial tail[5]

Habitat: Forest[6]

Diet: Insects and fruit[6]
 LC 


Unknown Template:Population change unknown[6]

References

Sources

External links

Wikidata ☰ Q1019157 entry