MORPHOLOGY: The pelage color of the Guinea baboon has a red tone to it. The hindquarters are lacking in hair and are red in color. Male Guinea baboons have a mantle of fur around their head. RANGE: The Guinea baboon is found in the countries of Guinea, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Senegal, and Sierra Leone. This species is found in savanna, woodland, steppe, and gallery forest habitats. |
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ECOLOGY: The Guinea baboon is a frugivorous species, but leaves also constitute a major part of the diet. This species also eats flowers, roots, grasses, bark, twigs, sap, tubers, bulbs, mushrooms, lichens, aquatic plants, seeds, shoots, buds, invertebrates, and small vertebrates, such as gazelle. Females with infants mostly feed on the ground for grasses and on low bushes (Estes, 1991). Guinea baboons will sit on the ground and shuffle along as they feed for grasses and other food found on the ground (Richard, 1985). Group sizes are variable ranging from 40 to 200 individuals. This is a diurnal species. LOCOMOTION: The Guinea baboon moves on the ground quadrupedally (Fleagle, 1988). When they run their style can be compared to the gallop of the horse (Hall, 1962). |
SOCIAL BEHAVIOR: The Guinea baboon has a multimale-multifemale social system. This species has a promiscuous mating system. There is much aggression between males because of competition for females. Males disperse from their natal groups, and females are philopatric. A linear hierarchy exists within the group based on the matriline. Associations between males and females are important because when a male first tries to join a group he might have a difficult time, so an association with a female could help him. Male consorts with aid in the rearing of the infants in terms of carrying and grooming, and will come to the defense of their female when attacked by members of another troop (Estes, 1991). Male consorts will even become foster parents when the mother dies (Altmann, 1980). Adult males may act aggressively towards troop members if they lag behind when the troop is moving rapidly (Estes, 1991). Guinea baboons when threatened by predators such as leopards will mob them and sometimes the leopards are severely injured (Estes, 1991). The large groups sometimes break up into smaller groups containing just one male, the males do not herd or defend the females (Dunbar and Nathan, 1972). |
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REFERENCES: Altmann, J. 1980. Baboon Mothers and Infants. Harvard University Press. Burton, F. 1995. The Multimedia Guide to the Non-human Primates. Prentice-Hall Canada Inc. Dunbar, R.I.M., and Nathan, M.F. 1972. Social Organization of the Guinea Baboon, Papio papio. Folia Primatoligica, Vol. 17, 321-334. Estes, R.D. 1991. The Behavior Guide to African Mammals. University of California Press. Fleagle, J. G. 1988. Primate Adaptation and Evolution. Academic Press. Hall, K.R.L. 1962. Numerical Data, Maintenance Activities and Locomotion of the Wild Chacma Baboon, Papio ursinus. Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., Vol. 139, 181-220. Richard, A.F. 1985. Primates in Nature. W.H. Freeman and Co., NY. |
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