| Literature DB >> 35620359 |
Gurjit K Theara1,2, Juan Ruíz Macedo3, Ricardo Zárate Gómez4, Eckhard W Heymann2, Sofya Dolotovskaya2,5.
Abstract
Fur rubbing, i.e. rubbing a substance or an object into the pelage, has been described in numerous Neotropical primate species, including species of titi monkeys, but it seems to be a rare behaviour. Here we describe a fur rubbing event in a wild coppery titi monkey (Plecturocebus cupreus) with Psychotria sp. (Rubiaceae) leaves observed and videotaped during a field study on vigilance behaviour between September-December 2019 in the Peruvian Amazon. Plants of the genus Psychotria contain a great diversity of secondary metabolites and are often used in traditional medicine. We suggest that the fur rubbing was an act of self-medication. This is the first record of fur rubbing in coppery titi monkeys in almost 4400 h of observation accumulated over more than 20 years. Copyright:Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35620359 PMCID: PMC9128366 DOI: 10.5194/pb-9-7-2022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Primate Biol ISSN: 2363-4715
A summary of fur rubbing with leaves observed in titi monkeys. NA: information not available.
| Titi monkey species | Plant species (family) | Mode of leaf | Duration | Application on | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| handling | (s) | body area | |||
|
| chewing | NA | NA | Carrillo-Bilbao et al. (2005) | |
| Undetermined species from Annonaceae and Bignoniaceae | chewing | NA | abdominal area | Francis Bossuyt, per- sonal communication in Carillo-Bilbao et al. (2005) | |
| squeezing with one or both hands | 15–30 | chest and abdominal area | Souza-Alves et al. (2018) | ||
| squeezing with both hands | 300–900 | chest and abdominal area | Huashuayo-Llamocca and Heymann (2017) | ||
|
| chewing | NA | chest | Oliveira et al. (2020) | |
|
| chewing | abdominal area | this report |