Howler Monkey Facts | Brazil Wildlife Guide
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
- Side-opening, wide nostrils on their short snout.
- They lack rump pads, as Old World monkeys have.
- Their prehensile tail is used as an extra arm to grip or hang from branches.
- They have beards and long,
think hair that may be brown, red or black, with brown or blond saddles. - Can weigh up to 22 pounds.
- The head and body can be up to 3 feet long, and the tail can be another 3 feet.
- The neck and lower jaw are big, in order to house their super-sized vocal cords.
RANGE AND HABITAT
Howlers inhabit both lowland and mountain habitats. Fortunately, they are less susceptible to the effects of habitat destruction than their relative the spider monkey and often cling precariously to trees in many relic patches of forest. They live up to 7,000 feet from southern Mexico to northwestern South America.BEHAVIOR AND COMMUNICATION
While howlers are not particularly aggressive, they definitely sound the part! The thunderous males address each other every morning with a guttural sound more similar to a lion’s tremendous roar than the calls of a small, tree-dwelling folivore. The spine-tingling cries can carry as far as 3 miles in even the densest jungles. They call out once more at dusk and will also howl if a trespasser comes too close, as a way of keeping rivals at a safe distance.Their powerful vocal calls are produced by their overly large larynx and throat, which balloon outward, inflating and resonating. Females have loud wails and groans that usually signal distress or calling a stray infant.
They live and travel in troops of 4 to 19 members, each having its own territory in which it feeds and lives; the size of the territory usually ranges between 3 to 25 acres. Generally, members of the group are not related because members of both sexes leave the group before becoming sexually mature.
HOWLER MONKEY DEVELOPMENT
Most of the time, howlers rest, due to the low-energy diet of foliage. They are diurnal and will move around or socialize, but only for about 45 minutes each day. When resting, they grasp branches with their tails, which can hold all of their body weight.