Abstract

The yellow-tailed woolly monkey,Lagothrixflavicauda(Humboldt, 1812), is a large atelid endemic to the cloud forests of Peru. The identity of this species was uncertain for at least 150 years, since its original description in 1812 without a voucher specimen. Additionally, the absence of expeditions to the remote Peruvian cloud forests made it impossible to collect material that would help to confirm the true identity ofL.flavicaudaduring the 19th and first half of the 20th century. Until now, the specimens ofL.flavicaudacollected by H. Watkins, in 1925, in La Lejía (Amazonas, Peru) were thought to be the oldest ones deposited in any scientific collection. Nevertheless, after reviewing the databases of the several international museums and literature, we found one specimen ofL.flavicaudadeposited at the Muséum National d’histoire Naturelle (Paris, France) collected in 1900 by G.A. Baër, in the most eastern part of San Martín (Peru), where the presence of this species was not confirmed until 2011. Thus, Baër’s specimen represents the oldest known specimen of the yellow-tailed woolly monkey and the only one coming from the eastern part of the species’ distribution. Finally, we highlight the importance of online scientific databases for easily diagnosable species. However, caution needs to be taken when using them. We also discuss the value of scientific collections as sources of new discoveries.

Highlights

  • The yellow-tailed woolly monkey, Lagothrix flavicauda (Humboldt, 1812), is a large atelid endemic to the cloud forests of Peru

  • We discuss the value of scientific collections as sources of new discoveries

  • As a part of an ongoing study, we were looking for specimens of Lagothrix flavicauda deposited in scientific collections or cited in the literature

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Summary

Brief taxonomic history of Lagothrix flavicauda

The yellow-tailed woolly monkey, Lagothrix flavicauda (Humboldt, 1812), endemic to the Peruvian cloud forest in the Departments of Amazonas, San Martín, Loreto, and Huánuco (Leo Luna 1989, Shanee 2011), is one of the rarest and most threatened primates in the Neotropics. After reviewing the available literature and comparing museum specimens, Fooden (1963) found that Humboldt’s Simia flavicauda and Thomas’ Oreonax hendeii represented the same species of woolly monkey. Fooden’s (1963) taxonomic arrangement was largely accepted (Napier 1976, Eisenberg and Redford 1999, Nowak 1999), until Groves (2001) tested the phylogeny of the atelids This latter author, based on a 50% majority rule consensus tree estimated via a parsimony analysis of only 20 cranial characters and an undetermined number of species, found out that Lagothrix flavicauda was more closely related to species of Ateles than to L. lagothricha. The results of both studies were similar, supporting a monophyletic Lagothrix that included flavicauda and the other woolly monkey species, agreeing with Fooden’s (1963) taxonomic arrangement

The oldest known specimen of Lagothrix flavicauda
The importance of reviewing museum specimens
LITERATURE CITED
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