"Devil Monkey" is a nickname for "Bigfoot," also called a "Sasquatch," an ape-like Cryptid (legendary creature) purported to inhabit forests of Pacific Northwest America. Some supporters of the Bigfoot Theory have suggested that Sasquatches might be surviving members of the genus Gigantopithecus, while others have suggested it could be a member of the genus Paranthropus, both of which are thought (with good evidence) to be extinct. Others have even suggested that the ever-evasive Bigfoot could be a member of the Homo genus, specifically Homo erectus, Homo heidelbergensis, or even Homo neanderthalensis. So far the only evidence that such a creature might exist is circumstantial at best, and certainly not enough to assign a nomenclature to the infamous "Devil Monkey."
The scientific name of the drill monkey is Mandrillus leucophaeus.
The scientific name for the Russian monkey is Macaca sylvanus.
The scientific name for the purple faced leaf monkey is Trachypitnecus Vetulus
A monkey's scientific name typically falls under the genus "Macaca," such as Macaca mulatta for the rhesus monkey.
the scientific name is a macoroni soalpoal
the scientific name is Moloch Horridus
The scientific name for a Vervet monkey is Chlorocebus pygerythrus.
Rhesus
Alouatta palliata is the most often used scientific name for the black howler monkey.
The scientific name of monkey is Simiiformes. Monkeys are classified under the order Primates, suborder Haplorhini, and infraorder Simiiformes.
The scientific name would be Artocarpus rigidus.
The scientific name is Ateles hybridus. The term "hybrid spider monkey" is sometimes used for the species, because it has traits that originally suggested it was a subspecies of either of two other species.