
Night monkeys make a notably wide variety of vocal sounds, with up to eight categories of distinct calls (gruff grunts, resonant grunts, screams, low trills, moans, gulps, sneeze grunts and hoots), and a frequency range of 190-1,950 Hz.[3] Unusual among the New World monkeys, they are monochromats, that is, they have no colour vision, presumably because it is of no advantage given their nocturnal habits. They have a better spatial resolution at low light levels than other primates which contributes to their ability to capture insects and move at night.[4]
All night monkeys form pair bonds, and live in family groups of the mated pair with their immature offspring. Family groups defend territories by vocal calls and scent marking. Only one infant is born each year. The male is the primary caregiver, and the mother only carries the infant for the first week or so of its life.
Night monkeys constitute one of the few monkey species that are affected by the often deadly human malaria protozoan Plasmodium falciparum, making them useful as non-human primate experimental models in malaria research.
Taxonomy
Until 1983, all night monkeys were placed into only one (A. lemurimus) or two species (A. lemurinus and A. azarae). Some authors still believe that there are only two or three true species, the remaining taxa being subspecies of these. An often used distinction is an even split of eight species between a northern gray-necked group (A. lemurinus, A. hershkovitzi, A. trivirgatus and A. vociferans) and a southern red-necked group (A. miconax, A. nancymaae, A. nigriceps and A. azarae).[1] It has been argued that the taxa otherwise considered subspecies of A. lemurinus – brumbacki, griseimembra and zonalis – actually should be considered separate species,[6][7] whereas it has been argued that A. hershkovitzi is a junior synonym of A. lemurinus.[6] A new species from the gray-necked group was recently described as A. jorgehernandezi. As is the case with some other splits in this genus,[8] an essential part of the argument for recognizing this new species was differences in thechromosomes.[7] Chromosome evidence has also been used as an argument for merging "species", as was the case for considering infulatus a subspecies of A. azarae rather than a separate species.[9] Fossil species have (correctly or incorrectly) been assigned to this genus, but onlyextant species are listed below.
Classification
- Family Aotidae
- Aotus lemurinus (gray-necked) group:
- Gray-bellied Night Monkey, Aotus lemurinus
- Panamanian Night Monkey, Aotus zonalis
- Gray-handed Night Monkey, Aotus griseimembra
- Hernández-Camacho's Night Monkey, Aotus jorgehernandezi
- Brumback's Night Monkey, Aotus brumbacki
- Three-striped Night Monkey, Aotus trivirgatus
- Spix's Night Monkey, Aotus vociferans
- Aotus azarae (red-necked) group:
- Azara's Night Monkey, Aotus azarae
- Peruvian Night Monkey, Aotus miconax
- Nancy Ma's Night Monkey, Aotus nancymaae
- Black-headed Night Monkey, Aotus nigriceps
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