Current Experience:  Choose One      Change

Over 50,000 color images of worldwide
plant and animal species

Over 50,000 color images of worldwide
plant and animal species

Cebus albifrons
Capuchin - White Fronted
KingdomAnimal (Animalia)
PhylumBackboned Animals (Chordata)
ClassMammal (Mammalia)
OrderPrimates, Monkey, Apes, Man (Mammal) (Primates)
FamilyMonkey - New World (Mammal) (Platyrrhines)
SubfamilyCapuchins - New World (Mammal) (Cebinae (In Cebidae))
GenusCebus
Scientific NameCebus albifrons
Common NameCapuchin - White Fronted
Click here for species info ↓


NONE
NEW SEARCH
SPECIES INFO
White fronted capuchin (Cebus albifrons) is found widely on the mainland of South America. This is found from Venezuela west to Colombia and south to Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia. This is also found locally in western Brazil. The color depicted by Eisenberg in his mammals of the northern Neotropics is a pale brown with a white head and white shoulders. Emmons pictures a pale brown form with a black streak on the top of the head.

Some of the forms are critically endangered. Others are data deficient.


Capuchin monkeys (Genus Cebus) are found from Honduras and Costa Rica in Central America south to Peru, Bolivia, and Brazil. This genus contains from 5 - 8 species. These monkeys are from 12 to about 22 inches of body length. The males are larger than the females. These monkeys feed on fruits, seeds, leaves, bird eggs, insects, and even crabs and oysters.

The taxonomic thinking in 2005 per Wilson-Reeder is to limit the Cebidae family to just three subfamilies: Cebinae (capuchins), Samiriinae (squirrel monkeys), and Callitrichinae (marmosets and tamarins).
However, we have used the Cebidae term herein to apply just to the Wilson-Reeder Cebinae sub-family. We have kept the Samiriinae and Callitrichinae as separate groups.
There are but 8 species in the Cebinae and all of them have been placed in the genus Cebus. This genus is found from Central America south to Bolivia and Brazil.
In older books, the Cebidae family previously was broken into 6 different groups:

Owl Monkeys (Now to Aotidae)
Titi Monkeys (Now to Pitheciidae-Calicebinae)
Capuchins, Squirrel Monkeys(Now to Cebinae and Saimiriinae)
Sakis and Uakaris)((Now to Pitheciide-Pitheciinae)
Howler Monkeys (Now to Atelidae-Alouattinae)
Spider Monkeys (Now to Atelidae-Atelinae)

New World Monkeys (Platyrrhines) are found from southern Central America, south through most of tropical South America. They are characterized by having their nostrils far apart and by the fact that they spend most of their lives in trees. Most species are small mammals with very long tails. Marmosets and squirrel monkeys are included herein. The term Platyrrhini refers to flat noses. New World monkeys are generally small.

This family earlier was divided into New World monkeys (Cebidae) with eighty-two lifeforms, and the tamarins and marmosets (Callitrichidae) with forty-three lifeforms. (These numbers are controversial as there is no universal agreement upon species and subspecies.)

The Wilson-Reeder 2005 World Check List of Mammals has counted 128 species and divided this group into four families: Cebidae (including Callitrihinae, Cebinae, and Saimiriinae), Aotidae, Pithecidae(including Callicebinae and Pitheciinae), and Atelidae (including Alouattinae and Atelinae).

We have divided this complex into and families and subfamilies and placed them in alphabetical order. (There is not universal agreement yet, so separating these groups in this manner might be helpful.)

Lemurs, Monkeys, Apes, and Man are combined into the single order of Primates. This order contains about 390 different species. The Wilson Reeder 2005 world check list of mammals lists 376 species. (They did not include the newer order Scandentia of tree shrews with its 20 species.)

Ian Redmond presents a taxonomy tree that involves the order, two sub-orders, several infraorders, several superfamilies, several families, and several subfamilies. We support this complicated and valuable analyses of the primate order. However, our mission is to help identify species, and we have reduced the five intermediate taxonomic levels between order and genus to two levels to facilitate a quick taxonomic drill down.

Mammals (Class Mammalia), together with the birds, are among the youngest of the classes of animals. In species count, mammals number about fifty-one hundred, trailing reptiles (approximately fifty-five hundred), fish (approximately eighteen thousand), and birds (approximately eighty-six hundred).

There are three sub-types of mammals:

monotremes, the most primitive:
Develop in reptilian-like eggs and suckle milk emerging (i.e., spiny anteater, duckbilled platypus)
marsupials
Newborn emerges very underdeveloped and continue to mature in a pouch on its mother's abdomen (i.e., opossums, koala, kangaroo)
placental
Embryo develops within the uterus of the female and is dependent on a placenta for nutrition and waste removal (i.e., humans, lions, monkeys)

About sixty-five million years ago, the Tertiary era produced thirty-five orders of mammals. Of this number, eighteen have survived to represent Earth's most diversified as well as its most highly developed classification of animals.

Extinction of mammals is fast becoming a serious issue. Duff and Lawson present a list of forty-one extinct species that reached extinction prior to 1800. These forty-one species are not acknowledged in the counts of the various families. Duff and Lawson also present a list of forty-six species including three gazelles, one zebra, one seal, one deer, and one wolf that have probably gone extinct since 1800. These forty-six species are included in the family counts. Science is adding about forty to fifty new species a year to the list. Many of these are the result of divisions of prior species; some are recent discoveries.

Mammals owe their survival to adaptive capabilities that include the ability to exploit whatever sources of food are available to them, as well as their ability to adjust to various climes. Food specialization influenced evolution to such a great extent that the teeth structure can and has been used to provide extensive information on the food needs and various lifestyles of extinct species.

Despite the vast diversity among mammals in terms of size, habitats and adaptations, they share without exception many characteristics such as:

a. body hair
b. mammary glands
c. certain skull characteristics
d. four limbs that permit speed
e. parallel not perpendicular limbs
f. compartmentalized internal organs
g. a four-chambered heart and pulmonary circulation

Backboned Animals (Phylum Chordata) are the most advanced group of animals on earth. These animals are characterized by having a spinal cord or backbone. Most members have a clearly defined brain that controls the organism through a spinal cord. Fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals are in this phylum.

Currently, some taxonomists believe that the fish should be divided into two groups (sharks and regular fishes) and that there are some other primitive groups in the phylum such as hagfish or lampreys.

Animal Kingdom contains numerous organisms that feed on other animals or plants. Included in the animal kingdom are the lower marine invertebrates such as sponges and corals, the jointed legged animals such as insects and spiders, and the backboned animals such as fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals.