1. The Primates
of East Africa: Calling for More Respect for Mans Closest
Kin
Primates are a category of mammals that include
humans, apes, lemurs and monkeys. Covering over 185 species,
they range from lemurs -with hardly any resemblance to humans-
to chimpanzees, which are clearly our own kin. In size, they
range from the tiny 60 g bush baby to the huge 200 kg gorilla.
Primates are characterized by a complex brain, good binocular
vision and means of grasping. In addition, they experience
long periods in the womb, followed by slow maturation and
elongated lifespan.
Africa has the privilege of hosting 51 primate
species in habitats varying from forests to savannah woodlands.
And new primate species are still being discovered. One of
the latest additions is the highland mangabey monkey, whose
domicile is the Udzungwa Mountains of southern Tanzania.
Scientists were delighted, but nevertheless
puzzled when they reported the finding in May 2005; "This
exciting discovery demonstrates once again how little we know
about our closest living relatives, the nonhuman primates.
A large, striking monkey in a country of considerable wildlife
research over the last century has been hidden right under
our noses," said Russell Mittermeier of the IUCN-The
World Conservation Union's Species Survival Commission.
Sensing our fascination with nonhuman primates,
artists have in response created fictional characters that
have turned out to be immensely popular. The most successful
of this genre is the story of "Tarzan of the Apes".
This romance features an orphaned English lord who was adopted
by a female ape and brought up in the African jungle. The
writer Edgar Rice Burroughs brought Tarzan -one of the best-known
literary characters, to life in 1921.
Tarzan, an ape-man character has over the
years generated over 40 movies, and numerous radio shows,
television programmes and comic books. Primate characters
reflect mans complex nature more closely than other animal
characters in fiction and mythology. Come to think of it:
in this respect, the naughty tree-swinging monkey is more
deserving of our respect than haughty king lion.
Non-human primates are confined to the tropics,
where 80% of them live in rain forests as the dominant mammals.
East Africa has few patches of tropical forests where you
find the great apes, but the entire region supports many other
primate species. Only a few species are not dependent on trees
and can survive in savannah and sub desert areas. These include
baboons, vervet monkeys and chimpanzees. Not surprisingly,
travellers to east Africa are most likely to come across these
three species.
But most primates still depend on trees or
cliffs for security. Only the two most intriguing primate
species sleep on the ground- man and gorilla. We shall not
discuss these two species in this article and shall cover
them in separate features. For now, we shall only able to
look at the four most common primates found in East Africa;
bush babies, monkeys, baboons and chimpanzees.
Primates have complex social organizations
and the majority live in female-bonded groups. Scientists
speculate that this works as an alliance against aggressive
males. Females stay on in their natal group even after maturity,
while males exit the group. Feminist fundamentalists may perhaps
take a hint in this arrangement? Chimpanzees make an exception
to this rule. Very much like humans, female chimps seek an
alliance with a male protector, which is recognised and respected
by other males.
A common feature among primates is evolution
of the "primate hand." This is a prehensile hand
that is used for climbing and eating, and tool making in the
case of apes. Some primates- especially baboons and apes,
have such well-developed dexterity of the hand that the tips
of the thumb and forefinger meet at right angles. In apes,
the dexterity of the hands is very close that of humans -and
chimps are a good example.
Primates, just like humans, use social grooming
as a form of contact communication. Travellers will witness
this practice among baboons and vervet monkeys. Grooming is
useful for social bonding and is effected by use of the mouth
and hands. At a more practical level, it is also used to clean
the body of parasites, such as ticks. Grooming underlines
hierarchies; a junior member of a group will happily groom
its betters.
Reproduction in primates is quite varied, but there is much
in common with humans. Monkeys and apes, for example, actually
do menstruate. A key difference however, is that many primates
have distinct breeding seasons. The young are dependent on
the mother, but less so than human infants. They enjoy the
protection of a fur coat and are able to climb and reach the
mothers' teats and cling to her while being transported. Males
generally play a marginal role in parental care.
Bush babies are a big group of primates, comprising
about 18 species found Africa, and of which 11 species live
in East Africa. This is one of the smallest but most successful
of the primates. There are two main types: the lesser bush
baby and the greater bush baby. Both are widely distributed
and found in the forested national parks of East Africa. During
the day, they hide to avoid harm from eagles and large snakes.
In lodges located close to dense forest, such
as Shimba Hills in Kenya, bush babies are at night attracted
to the dining rooms by sugar and sugary products. They otherwise
feed mainly on tree gum and insects. Their technique of catching
insects is either by leaping and grabbing or by creeping to
within grabbing distance. They have distinct vocal sounds
and the name bush baby originated from the piercing baby-like
cries or advertising calls of the greater bush baby. Adult
males advertise the most, especially in the mating season.
Bush babies are easy to like-perhaps on account
of their baby-like cries and small innocent looking faces.
They are active only after sundown. Extremely agile and sprightly,
they use their elongated hind limbs to execute spectacular
leaps between trees. Distended finger and toe pads enable
them to cling unerringly, leap after leap, to even the most
slippery branches.
The other small primates like bush babies
are pottos. Being small and nocturnal, you will hardly ever
see them. Only one species is found in East Africa -in south
and west Uganda, far northwest Tanzania and western Kenya
in the Mount Elgon and Kakamega forests. Pottos wear a woolly
brown jacket and have large protuberant eyes, small rounded
naked ears, short muzzles and short stubby tails. They weigh
between 0.8 - 1.6kg.
Monkeys are a category of dog-shaped primates. They stand
and move horizontally on four legs, with head directed forwards
and downwards. Consequently, the form and movement is also
doglike, particularly for the more terrestrial ones like baboons.
Their bottoms are padded with bare "scars" that
may appear like wounds. These are called callosities, and
their colouration varies with the reproductive season. The
phenomenon is most prominent among baboons and is quite puzzling
to many travellers.
There is a clear distinction in form and structure
of the genders in monkeys. This is especially so among baboons,
in which females are clearly smaller in body size - by as
much as 50% compared males. The posture and movement of monkeys
is often a reflection of their social status. The confident
monkey appears relaxed and walks with its limbs extended and
back level. It surveys its realm casually and is at ease while
resting. On the other hand, subordinates walk with back hunched,
limbs rather bent and tail low or curved downwards.
Dominant males are known to exaggerate their
status by walking with a swagger and squatting with obvious
ostentation. This behaviour is the subject of many metaphors
in African folklore. Monkeys are generally social, though
they exhibit occasional rivalry. When attempting to intimidate
a rival, a monkey stands at its tallest, with the effect that
it looks bigger than it really is-, which of course is precisely
the point. "Filling yourself like a male monkey"
is a common teenage statement in Africa, and originates from
this practice.
Many travellers will have noticed that adult
male monkeys like exposing their genitals to impress or maybe
intimidate other males. Baboons are especially notorious for
this rather unwholesome exhibitionist behaviour. Do not be
offended when you find a dominant male, sitting apart on high
vantage point, facing away from the troop as he scans the
surrounding with legs spread apart to expose the penis. This
is a particularly noticeable thing about baboons, or perhaps
it is what humans cannot avoid noticing- being so well trained
to look down upon such immodest displays.
Among the monkeys species found in East Africa
are the blue or syke monkey, the vervet monkey and the colobus
monkey.
Sykes are dark, stoutly built and have round
facial disk and no beard. They weigh up to 12kg, with males
larger and heavier than females. The body is covered by thick
long fur with a brown patch of bristling hair. Sykes are quite
widespread in East Africa and can generally be sighted in
all forested national parks. But as they as not aware of park
boundaries, you will also see them in thick forests and forest
reserves outside the parks. They are however slowly being
confined to national parks due continuing degradation of protected
forests. Sykes mostly feed on fruits and leaves and occasionally
insects and flowers.
The vervet monkey is light coloured with a
black face; males have a pale blue scrotum. This monkey weighs
between 5 and 9kg. The vervet is adapted to practically all
woodland habitats, outside equatorial rain forests. It does
not venture very far from the safety of trees, on which it
also depends for food. You will commonly find it on forest
edges and is typically associated with riverine vegetation
and acacia trees. These monkeys are very friendly to people
and almost serve as de facto receptionists in most national
parks.
When a vertet hops onto your car as you arrive
at park gate, it is looking after its own interests. Humans
like to feed monkeys and it hopes to save the lots of energy
and the risk involved in natural foraging in the bush. However,
it is illegal to feed monkeys or any wildlife in all parks
in East Africa. Also be warned- these monkeys can bite if
scared. Their teeth and claws can inflict serious injuries
and you should therefore avoid close bodily contact.
Vervet monkeys are omnivorous and consume
a wide range of plant materials like fruits, seeds, sap, and
flowers. They also feed on invertebrates and have sometimes
balance the vegetarian fare with vertebrates such as lizards
and nestling birds and their eggs. They are often found in
the same areas as baboons with which they share many foods,
water holes and sleeping trees. The baboon is however not
good company for vervets; it is without mercy for its smaller
relative. When they compete for food, vervets are supplanted
and baboons will occasionally feed on young vervets.
Vervet monkeys are territorial and live in
troops of between 8-50 members. Their troops are organized
in a hierarchy of families whose members sleep, forage and
rest together. Males move out as they reach maturity at about
the age of 5 years, while females remain in a female-bonded
society. They pass on hereditary privileges: a mother's rank
predetermines that of the daughter.
The baboon is the other very common primate
in the savannahs of East Africa. It is a large, terrestrial
monkey with a dog like head. Indeed its scientific name is,
papio cynocephalus -here cynocephalus means "dog-headed."
They weigh up to 50 kg, with males reaching up to twice the
weight of females. Their limbs are sturdy, nearly equal in
length while hands and feet are short and wide with stubby
digits. The females have very prominent sexual swellings.
Baboons in East Africa appear in two common
species - olive and yellow baboons. Next to humans, baboons
are the best adapted of the terrestrial primates. For this
reason, they are the most widespread African primate- to be
found from savannah to arid habitats, so long as there is
water and trees or just cliffs. Most travellers will see baboons
on the highways, in many places across the region. They live
well enough outside protected areas, such as national parks.
They are serious crop pests and are even classified as vermin
-not wildlife- but in parts of Kenya.
A baboons' menu include grasses, flowers,
fruits, seeds and shoots. In the dry season, they uproot grasses
and feed on the underground stems, a niche they share with
no other mammal except warthogs. Beware that baboons are fierce
fighters and with group work can confront and scare off a
sharp predator such as leopard. Because of their well-developed
taste for fruits and other foods humans are partial to, baboons
tend to stalk visitors in national parks. In some cases they
supplement their diet with vertebrate prey: fish, lizards
and young of ground nesting birds, and bird or crocodile eggs.
Baboons live in troops ranging from 8 to over
200 animals, but typically average about 40. Troops tend to
avoid one another but may occasionally share resources. Their
social organization is highly complex and variable; they are
able to display emotion and can communicate motivation. Females
remain in the troop, with a reproductive strategy grounded
on male supremacy.
The colobus monkey is another common primate
that is the subject of many parables in Africa. The black
and white colobus are especially priced for their beautiful
coat, which has traditionally been used as ceremonial attire.
The colobus is found only in Africa and has a long tail and
hairs. The body weight reaches up to 23 kg. Both the black
and white species are well adapted and have inherited many
kinds of forest woodlands throughout East Africa. They live
up at the trees and rarely descend to the ground. This rather
shy animal is not easily sighted in the open and you are more
likely to see or hear them in thick woodlands and forested
parks.
The apes are a category of primates represented
in Africa by gorilla, chimpanzees and bonobo. Genetically,
they are the closest primates to man. The apes have very advanced
social and communication systems. They come close to humans
in the use of facial expressions and body language; using
both arms and hands. Apart from mother-infant contact, apes
groom each other in the usual primate fashion- rank determines
who grooms whom.
Apes are particularly adept at tactile communications;
that is use of touch. They seek and give reassurance by touching
each other - just like we do -on the most sensitive areas
like hands, face and genitals. Apes are slow to mature, with
the young reaching adolescence at about the age of 8 years.
Females bring forth their first fruits in their early teens,
much earlier than males who rarely start procreating before
reaching 15 years. All apes build nests- in this case, a platform
on which to sleep securely at night: chimps up the trees and
gorillas on the ground.
Generally all the apes are endangered and
vulnerable. The problem is that they occur naturally in very
small densities and face immediate threat of habitat loss
throughout their ranges. The situation is further compounded
by the fact that they perpetuate themselves at a rather slow
pace. The other risk is the bush meat trade that goes on in
some parts of Africa, which takes them out in large numbers
every year. The situation deteriorated after the 1980's, when
many previously inaccessible tracts of rainforest were opened
up for logging.
Although apes are not known to eat humans,
there are reports of their killing human babies in western
Uganda - especially in Bwindi and Kibale forests. This phenomenon
is as yet unexplained and is very puzzling to primate researchers
Chimpanzees are large, hairy and tailless;
females weigh between 30-40 kg, while males can reach 180
kg. They have big heads, flattened face with a small nose
and forward facing eyes. They have same number and type of
teeth as man. The chimp is indeed our closet living relative,
sharing 98% of our genes and much of our behaviour. The chimp
and mountain gorilla are the only great apes found naturally
is East Africa. Seeing chimps in the wild is an exhilarating
experience. And Uganda is the best country in the world to
view chimps in their natural habitat.
In Uganda, you encounter chimps at Queen Elizabeth
National Park and Kibale and Budingo forest. In Tanzania,
you see them at Gombe National Park, to the north west of
the country. Kenya has no naturally occurring chimps population,
but at Nanyuki in the central region, there is a sanctuary
for chimps rescued from the illegal trade going on in parts
of central and West Africa.
Chimps are mainly found in rainforest and wet savannah. They
are less robustly built than gorillas; their arms are shorter,
reaching just below the knees and the hands and fingers are
long with short thumbs. The feet are adapted for grasping,
with long, stout opposable big toe. Chimpanzees feed mainly
on fruits mostly gathered from trees and the young leaves
of plants. They also feed on flowers, pith, and bark and also
derive additional nutrients from insects and some meat too-
young antelopes, goats, and other primates such as young baboons
and colobus monkeys.
Chimps are articulate tool users- a clear
sign of a hard working brain. They can pick up small objects
between thumbs and side of the index finger. They possess
the acumen to prepare and use grass stems and sticks to fish
for insects. A female on heat may mate with several males.
It gives birth to a single off spring, which is independent
after about 4 years.
The chimps are individualistic and do not
live in cohesive groups like gorillas or monkeys. They live
in communities, with up to 100 animals sharing a common home
range. But they never assemble in a single troop. Jane Goodall,
in her book "The Chimpanzees of Gombe", has shown
that chimps, in common with humans, engage in some very disagreeable
behaviour. Males occasionally rape females and engage in internecine
warfare. Dr. Goodall has reported that from early 1974, a
brutal four-year war raged in Gombe between two chimp groups
that resulted in the decimation of one group.
The best way to see the primates of East Africa
is by taking a combined Kenya
and Uganda safari. On such as safari, you will
of course see the other wildlife East Africa is famed for,
but be sure that the locations where primates are found are
covered. On safari, wear light cottons and linen. But also
pack some warmer clothing, as the evenings and early mornings
can be quite chilly. Some rainwear is advisable between March
and June and October and December. You should bring along
a decent pair of sunglasses and a pair of binoculars. They
are very useful for spotting animals and you will be the envy
of your less knowledgeable traveling companions.
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