Cotton Headed Tamarin


            The stunning cotton headed tamarin is one of South America’s most endangered primates. Its name describes the fantastic crest of long white hair flowing around the black face like a mane of white cotton . Its body is small and covered with thick fur, with a brown back and shoulders, and white to yellow chest and limbs. The fore and hind limbs are similar in size, allowing it to move quadrupedally through the forest, running along branches or jumping short distances between tree branches. Like marmosets and other tamarins, the ancestral primate nails on their toes and fingers have evolved into claws, but their big toes, allow them to climb in a squirrel-like fashion in the trees. This small monkey has a long tail, which assists in balance; it is reddish orange towards the base and black towards the tip. Males and females look the same in appearance, as do the young.


Scientific Classification

Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Order
Family
Genus
Species
S. oedipus


Other Names
           
English
Crested Tamarin
French
Tamarin Á Perruque
German
Lisztaffe
Spanish
Tití Cabeza Blanca
Danish
Paryk Pinché


Status

            The cotton-headed tamarin is classified as Critically Endangered (CR) on the IUCN Red List, listed as endangered by the USDI and listed on Appendix 1 of CITES.

Population

            In the late 1960s and early 1970s, 20,000-30,000 individuals were exported to the United States for biomedical research. Current population estimates for the species are 6,000 individuals (approximately 2,000 mature individuals).


Habitat

            This species is found in tropical rainforest edges and secondary forests. The cotton-headed tamarin has been found in a variety of habitats from wetland tropical forest, to moist woodland forest and dry thorn forest savannah.

Range

            The cotton-headed tamarin is native to Colombia and occurs in north-western Colombia between the Río Atrato and the lower Río Cauca and Magdalena, in the Departments of Atlantico, Sucre, Cordoba, and western Bolivar, north-western Antiquoia and north-eastern Choco, east of the Río Atrato, from sea level up to 1,500 m. The south-western boundary of the cotton-tops range has not been clearly identified. Considered that it may extend to Villa Arteaga on the Río Sucio, which included reports of Cotton-top Tamarins in Los Katios National Park.


Biology

            The cotton-headed top tamarin is diurnal and arboreal, feeding on fruit, insects, tender vegetation, small vertebrates and bird eggs. With the exception of smaller prey, animals are killed with a bite to the head. Cotton-headed tamarins obtain the water they need by licking leaves that are wet with rain or dew, rather than expose themselves to predation by venturing down onto the forest floor. When not feeding, much time is spent in social grooming. Like other tamarins, they run their clawed digits through each other’s fur, examining it, and use their teeth, lips and tongue to pick off particles.


            These social monkeys live in groups of 3 to 13 individuals, with the average being around seven. Their home ranges extend from seven to ten hectares and often overlap with those of other groups, with contact between groups being agonistic. These tamarins are territorial, scent marking their home ranges and defending them with showy confrontations, fluffing up their fur and making loud calls to scare away intruders and attract individuals from their own group.


            There can be more than one adult male and female in the group but only one female actually breeds. Reproduction in other females is suppressed by the behavioural domination of the reproductive female, and by the effects of her pheromones and genital gland scent. Males and other group members play a major role in caring for the young. The co-operative breeding system of tamarins appears to be unique amongst primates, and serves to help the breeding female care for the offspring. Lactation and feeding the young demands a great deal of energy, and so males and other group members often carry the young, allowing the female more time to forage and feed, while other members of the group also help by surrendering food morsels to the young and the breeding femals. This explains why the female is usually larger in size than the male. In fact, research suggests that smaller males are often preferred mating partners by the females as they are more nimble in the forest and therefore better food gatherers.


            Like other tamarins, the cotton-headed tamarin usually gives birth to twins. The gestation period is around 140 days, and the offspring, born helpless, are carried everywhere rather than being left in nests. The co-operative care of the group is the key to the infant’s development, for they become independent after only two months. This unique breeding system is also essential as it enables tamarins to maintain a high reproductive rate. Once established as breeders in a group, a female can produce twins once a year, and sometimes twice.


Threats

            Deforestation is this species’ greatest threat. It has already lost most of its habitat through forest clearing for timber, charcoal, human settlement, agricultural land and industry. The forest areas in which it now exists are so fragmented, it is believed that they are too small to maintain the tamarin populations. With easier access to the tamarin’s habitat, animal collectors trap these small monkeys and sell them in port cities, either for export or local trade. Populations in the past have also suffered from the export of significant numbers for biomedical research in the 1960s and 1970s.


Conservation Measures

            Legally protected in Colombia since 1969. Major threat in the past was export for the pet trade, zoos and biomedical research, but export was banned in 1974. Listed on CITES Appendix I. Three new protected forests were established where the native population exists.

            Proyecto Tití, a conservation programme for the Cotton-top Tamarin in Colombia, was established in 1987 to begin the first long-term field study on this species in collaboration with Colombian biologists, educators, NGO’s and government authorities. Initial research focused on understanding the factors influencing reproductive strategies of Cotton-top Tamarins, but it quickly grew into a comprehensive conservation programme including educational efforts, capacity building, training Colombian students, development of economic alternatives, and the development of an agricultural training programme to decrease the pressure on the forest by local communities.


References
http://www.iucnredlist.org/apps/redlist/details/19823/0
http://pin.primate.wisc.edu/factsheets/entry/cotton-top_tamarin
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cottontop_tamarin
http://thewebsiteofeverything.com/animals/mammals/Primates/Callitrichidae/Saguinus/Saguinus-oedipus.html
http://www.centralpark.com/guide/central-park-zoo/tamarins/cotton-top-tamarin.html

The Bali Starling


            The Bali starling is one of the rarest birds in the world and relatively new to science being first described in 1912 by Walter Rothschild, from whom the bird gains its specific name. This medium-large starling is almost entirely white apart from black wing- and tail-tips and the striking, bare blue skin around the eye. The crest is long and drooping, the bill is yellow and the legs are a greyish blue.


Status

            The Bali starling is classified as Critically Endangered (CR) on the IUCN Red List, and listed on Appendix I of CITES. Conservationists now in fact think that the species may be extinct in the wild, but this is yet to be formerly confirmed.


Population

            This species is endemic to the island of Bali, Indonesia, where it formerly ranged across the north-west third of the island. It has perhaps long been uncommon (numbers in the early 1900s, the period of discovery, have been retrospectively guessed at 300-900, although this is thought to be a gross underestimate), but has declined drastically in population and range. Illegal poaching reduced numbers to a critically low level in 1990, when the wild population was estimated at c.15 birds. Conservation intervention coupled with the release of a few captive-bred birds raised this to between 35 and 55. However, despite excellent breeding success and continuing conservation efforts, the population continues to fluctuate and fell to six birds in 2011. Continuing releases have raised numbers in West Bali National Park, such that surveys in March 2005 found 24 individuals2 and in 2008 the population here was believed to be around 50 birds. The population appears to have adapted to the island and is breeding, with a total of 65 adults and 62 young at present. About 1,000 are believed to survive in captivity.


Habitat

            Inhabits monsoon forest and acacia savannah of Bali, Indonesia.


Range

            The Bali starling is endemic to the island Bali in Indonesia and previously found throughout the northwest of the island.


Biology


         The breeding season runs from October to November and nests are preferentially made within woodpecker holes in the trunks of trees. Males become very aggressive at this time. Males attract females by calling loudly and bobbing up and down. The female lays and incubates two-three eggs. Both males and females bring food to the nests for chicks after hatching.


Outside the breeding season, Bali starlings could previously be found in flocks of up to 40 birds, often roosting in dense coconut trees. Adults feed on ants, termites and caterpillars but also on fruits and seeds.


Threat

            The Bali starling has been pushed to the brink of extinction by the illegal capture of individuals to satisfy the caged-bird trade. The rarer this beautiful species became, the higher the black market price, and the wild population has consequently been decimated. Habitat destruction and competition for nest sites with the black-winged starling, which is spreading throughout the island, are further threats to survival.


Conservation

            The Bali starling has been protected under Indonesian law since 1970 and the entire recent wild population occurred within the Bali Barat National Park. Birdlife International established the Bali Starling Project in 1983, with the cooperation of the Indonesian government and US and British zoos, in an attempt to save this species from extinction. Armed guards protected the population within the park and captive-bred individuals were released to bolster the wild population, but numbers nevertheless continued to decline to just 36 to 40 individuals in 1994. 


The programme was dogged with problems, and in 1999 an armed gang stole almost all the 39 captive individuals in the park that were awaiting release into the wild; in the same year the wild population plummeted once again, this time to just 12 individuals. Despite on-going conservation efforts the Bali starling is now believed to be Extinct in the Wild, and the future of Bali's national bird looks increasingly bleak.


References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bali_Starling
http://www.birdlife.org/datazone/speciesfactsheet.php?id=6822
http://www.fnpf.org/what-we-do/nusa-penida-bali/wildlife/bali-starling-conservation-project
http://www.iucnredlist.org/apps/redlist/details/106006822/0