logo_4719.jpg

DOLPHIN FIGURINES

ELEPHANT FIGURINES

FROG FIGURINES

DRAGON FIGURINES

EAGLE FIGURINES

LIGHTHOUSE FIGURINES

CRYSTAL FIGURINES

Home Products New Products Sale Items View Cart About Us Contact Us

See Promo Code Page for Free Shipping and 30% discount.

We Accept
We take Visa-Mastercard-DiscoverOfficial PayPal Seal

BBBOnLine Reliability Seal VeriSign Secured.TM.

Shopping Cart

There are no items in your cart
 
View cart Subtotal: $0.00

Categories


Night Monkeys

The baby night monkey, also known as the Owl monkey or Douroucoulis, are the members of the New World monkeys. They are widely distributed in the forests of Central and South America, from Panama south to Paraguay and northern Argentina.

The genus name means "earless"; they have ears, of course, but the external ears are tiny and hard to see. They are called baby night monkeys because they are active at night and are in fact the only truly nocturnal monkeys.

Until 1983, the baby night monkey was placed into only a few species. Some authors still believe that there are only two or three true species, the remaining types being subspecies of these. The most widely agreed distinction is between a grey-necked group, and a red-necked group, authors recognising only two species refer to these as A. trivirgatus and A. azarae respectively.

A baby night monkey makes a notably wide variety of vocal sounds, 50-100 distinct calls having been identified. Unusually 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.

All baby 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.