n.
(Zoöl.) A baboon (Gelada Ruppelli) of Abyssinia, remarkable for the length of the hair on the neck and shoulders of the adult male.
| Dictionary: Gel·a·da |
(Zoöl.) A baboon (Gelada Ruppelli) of Abyssinia, remarkable for the length of the hair on the neck and shoulders of the adult male.
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| Animal Encyclopedia: Gelada |
Theropithecus gelada
SUBFAMILY
Cercopithecinae
TRIBE
Papionini
TAXONOMY
Theropithecus gelada (Rüppel, 1835), Semyen (Simien), Ethiopia. This is the only extant species in this genus, but several recent fossil relatives are known, some of them very large-bodied.
OTHER COMMON NAMES
English: Gelada baboon; French: Gelada; German: Dschelada.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
There is marked sexual dimorphism in the pelage. In males, the fur is yellow-brown dorsally, with a long cape of darker hair, and dark grayish brown ventrally. There is a prominent tuft of pale whiskers on each cheek. Females lack a cape and the fur is yellow brown dorsally and dark grayish brown ventrally. The eyelids are very pale, contrasting with the dark facial skin. Males have much larger canine teeth than females. In both sexes, there is a large, hourglass-shaped patch of red skin on the chest. There is also pronounced sexual dimorphism in body size. Head and body length: 28.5 in (71.5 cm) for males and 23 in (57.5 cm) for females; tail length: 19 in (48.0 cm) for males and 15 in (37.0 cm) for females. Body mass: 41 lb 14 oz (19 kg) for males and 25 1b 13 oz (11.7 kg) for females.
DISTRIBUTION
Very limited range in the northern and central highlands of Ethiopia.
HABITAT
Inhabits montane grassland interspersed with dense thickets, but lacking tall trees and characterized by a pronounced dry season.
BEHAVIOR
Diurnal and essentially terrestrial. The basic social units are one-male groups and bachelor male groups, which are organized into bands and then into herds that may contain hundreds of members.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
Specialized grass-feeder, foraging by shuffling along on the ischial callosities on the buttocks and plucking grass with the hands. Eats seeds, leaves, and bulbs, along with some animal prey.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Polygamous. Single births are typical. In females, which lack a sexual swelling in the perineal area, the coloration of the red chest patch changes over the ovarian cycle, reaching maximum intensity around the time of ovulation, when pale, bead-like vesicles bordering the chest patch are also most prominent. Gestation period approximately 170 days.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Listed as Near Threatened.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
None known.
| Wikipedia: Gelada |
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A male Gelada
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| Theropithecus gelada (Rüppell, 1835) |
The Gelada (Theropithecus gelada), sometimes called the Gelada Baboon, is a species of Old World monkey found only in the Ethiopian Highlands, with large populations in the Semien Mountains. Theropithecus is derived from the Greek root words for "beast-ape."[3][4] Like its close relatives the baboons (genus Papio), it is largely terrestrial, spending much of its time foraging in grasslands.
Contents |
Since 1979 it has been customary to place the Gelada in its own particular genus (Theropithecus), though some genetic research suggests that this monkey should, in fact, be grouped with its papionine kin;[5] other researchers have classified this species even farther distant from Papio.[6] While Theropithecus gelada is the only living species of its genus, separate larger species are known from the fossil record: T. brumpti, T. darti[7] and T. oswaldi, formerly classified under the generic name of Simopithecus.[citation needed] Theropithecus, while restricted at present to Ethiopia, is also known from fossil specimens found in Africa and the Mediterranean into Asia, including South Africa, Malawi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia, Algeria, Morocco, Spain, and India. More exactly at : Mirzapur, Cueva Victoria, Pirro Nord, Ternifine, Hadar, Turkana, Makapansgat, Swartkrans.
Theropithecus gelada can be physically distinguished from baboons by the bright patch of skin on its chest. This patch is hourglass-shaped, and on males, bright red and surrounded by white hair. On females the patch is far less pronounced. However, when in oestrus, the female's patch will brighten, and a "necklace" of fluid-filled blisters forms on the patch. This is thought to be analogous to the swollen buttocks common to most baboons experiencing oestrus. This modification likely came about due to the Gelada's unique mode of feeding - it spends most of its waking hours grazing from an upright sitting position, rump hidden beneath and so unavailable for display. The male Gelada's tail is about as long as the body and densely tufted at the tip; it also has a long and flowing mantle and mane.
The Gelada lives in small harems consisting of one male, several females, and their offspring. These smaller bands often join together to feed, forming groups of upwards of 350 individual monkeys. At especially good feeding spots, groups in excess of 670 individuals have been observed.
The Gelada is exclusively herbivorous but is specialised as a grass-eater, consuming every part of the plant (but favouring one part over the others depending upon season), from green blades (in the wet season) to seeds to rhizomes (in the dry season) to stalks, flowers, and fruits. It has the most opposable thumb of any of the catarrhine primates (not including humans), allowing it to pick apart grasses with great dexterity to select the most nourishing meal. It is one of the only true grazing monkeys.[8]
Although not listed as endangered, only 50,000-60,000 Geladas are known to exist. Hunting and habitat destruction have forced the Gelada into areas formerly inhabited only by the Olive Baboon, and hybridisation between the two species has been observed.
There are two subspecies of Gelada:
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| teff (word origin: Ethiopia) | |
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![]() | Dictionary. Webster 1913 Dictionary edited by Patrick J. Cassidy Read more | |
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