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List of primates described in the 2010s

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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This is a list of species of the order Primates that were described in the 2010s.

2010

  • Rondon's marmoset (Mico rondoni) was described by Ferrari, Sena, Schneider, and Silva Jr. It is found in Brazil.[2]
  • Northern buffed-cheeked gibbon (Nomascus annamensis) was described by Van Ngoc Thinh, Mootnick, Vu Ngoc Thanh, Nadler, and Roos. It is found in Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam.[3]
  • Myanmar snub-nosed monkey (Rhinopithecus strykeri) was described by Thomas Geissmann, Ngwe Lwin, Saw Soe Aung, Thet Naing Aung, Zin Myo Aung, Tony Htin Hla, Mark Grindley, and Frank Momberg. It is found in Myanmar.[4]
  • Wallace's tarsier (Tarsius wallacei) was described by Merker, Driller, Dahruddin, Wirdateti, Sinaga, Perwitasari-Farajallah, and Shekelle. It is found in Indonesia on the island of Sulawesi.[5]
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2011

  • Gerp's mouse lemur (Microcebus gerpi) was described by Radespiel and collaborators. It is found in eastern Madagascar.[6]

2012

  • Lesula (Cercopithecus lomamiensis) was described by Hart, Detwiler, Gilbert, Burrell, Fuller, Emetshu, Hart, Vosper, Sargis, and Tosi. It is found in the Democratic Republic of Congo.[7]
  • Vieira's titi (Callicebus vieirai) was described by Gualda-Barros, Nascimento and Amaral. It is found in the central-northern Brazil.[8]

2013

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2014

  • Milton's titi (Callicebus miltoni), described by Julio César Dalponte, Felipe Ennes Silva e José de Sousa e Silva Júnior. Endemic to Brazil.[13]
  • Isabel's saki (Pithecia isabela), a saki from Peru described by Laura Marsh. It is named after an aristocratic Peruvian woman named Isabel Godin des Odonais.[14]
  • Cazuza's saki (Pithecia cazuzai), a saki from Brazil described by Laura Marsh. It was named after Brazilian primatologist Dr. José de Sousa e Silva Júnior, nicknamed "Cazuza".[14]
  • Mittermeier's Tapajós saki (Pithecia mittermeieri), a saki from Brazil described by Laura Marsh and named for primatologist Russell Mittermeier.[15] Although supported by the IUCN/SSC Primate Specialist Group and ITIS,[16] the species designation is disputed by Serrano-Villavicencio et al. 2019.[17]
  • Rylands' bald-faced saki (Pithecia rylandsi), a saki found in Bolivia, Peru, and possibly Brazil described by Laura Marsh and named after Anthony Rylands.[15] Although supported by the IUCN/SSC Primate Specialist Group and ITIS,[18] the species designation is disputed by Serrano-Villavicencio et al. 2019.[17]
  • Pissinatti's bald-faced saki (Pithecia pissinatti), a saki described by Laura Marsh.[15] Although supported by the IUCN/SSC Primate Specialist Group and ITIS,[19] the species designation is disputed by Serrano-Villavicencio et al. 2019.[17]
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2015

  • White-cheeked macaque (Macaca leucogenys), was thought to be an Assam macaque (Macaca assamensis), but distinct differences led to Macaca leucogenys being considered a new species.[20]
  • Urubamba brown titi (Plecturocebus urubambensis), a titi from Peru described by Vermeer and Tello-Alvarado as Callicebus urubambensis.[21]
  • Montagne d'Ambre dwarf lemur (Cheirogaleus andysabini), a dwarf lemur from Madagascar described by Lei, McLain, Frasier, Taylor, Bailey, Engberg, Ginter, Nash, Randriamampionona, Groves, Mittermeier and Louis, Jr.[22]
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2016

  • Bemanasy mouse lemur (Microcebus manitrata), a mouse lemur from Madagascar described by Hotaling, Foley, Lawrence, Bocanegra, Blanco, Rasoloarison, Kappeler, Barrett, Yoder and Weisrock.[23]
  • Ganzhorn's mouse lemur (Microcebus ganzhorni), a mouse lemur from Madagascar described by Hotaling, Foley, Lawrence, Bocanegra, Blanco, Rasoloarison, Kappeler, Barrett, Yoder and Weisrock.[23]
  • Nosy Boraha mouse lemur (Microcebus boraha), a mouse lemur from Madagascar described by Hotaling, Foley, Lawrence, Bocanegra, Blanco, Rasoloarison, Kappeler, Barrett, Yoder and Weisrock.[23]
  • Ankarana dwarf lemur (Cheirogaleus shethi), a dwarf lemur from northern Madagascar described by Frasier, Lei, McLain, Taylor, Bailey, Ginter, Nash, Randriamampionona, Groves, Mittermeier and Louis Jr.[24]
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2017

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2018

  • Alta Floresta titi (Plecturocebus grovesi) a titi from Brazil described by Byrne, Silva, Silva-Júnior, Costa Araujo, Bertuol, Gonçalves, Melo, Rylands, Mittermeier, Silva, Nash, Canale, Alencar, Rossi, Carneiro, Sampaio, I. P. Farias, Schneider, and Hrbek.[30]

2019

  • Niemitz's tarsier (Tarsius niemitzi), a tarsier from the Togean Islands of Indonesia described by Shekelle, Groves, Maryanto, Mittermeier, Salim, A. and Springer.[31]
  • Munduruku marmoset (Mico munduruku), a marmoset from Pará in Brazil described by Costa-Araújo, Hrbek & Farias in Costa-Araújo, Melo, Canale, Hernández-Rangel, Messias, Rossi, F. E. Silva, M. N. F. da Silva, Nash, Boubli, I. P. Farias & Hrbek.[32]
  • Parecis titi (Plecturocebus parecis), a species of titi from northern Brazil described by Gusmão, Messias, Carneiro, Schneider, Alencar, Calouro, Dalponte, Mattos, Ferrari, Buss, Azevedo, Santos Jr, Nash, Rylands, and Barnett.[33]
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See also

References

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