Spider Monkey (Ateles geoffroyi)
Spanish names: Mono Arana, Mono Colorado
Spider Monkey Photo - Costa Rica Spider Monkey Photo - Costa Rica Spider Monkey Photo - Costa Rica

About the Spider Monkey of Costa Rica

Habitat
Spider Monkeys tend to stay high off the ground in the canopy of tropical forests.

Range

The genus of spider monkeys ranges from Southern Tamaulipas in Mexico to Mato Grosso in Brazil. This species formerly was abundant all over Costa Rica and was more abundant in many parts of Central America. Now, due to hunting and deforestation, it is restricted to areas with patches of forest large enough to sustain its troop size. How intensively it was and is hunted depends on the area of Central America; but because it is one of the largest New World primate species, it is more vulnerable to hunting.

National Parks

Santa Rosa National Park, La Selva, Corcovado National Park, Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve; may also be found in San Vito.

Physical Description

This species contains 9 subspecies based on color variation; the color of the back, shoulders, and tail varies from blonde to black depending on subspecies. Costa Rica is home to 2 of these subspecies: A. g. ornatus in the north and A. g. panamensis in the south; this latter subspecies is darker with a reddish brown trunk and back legs, and black tail, forelegs, and the top of its head and shoulders.

Biology and Natural History

Spiders are the most mobile of Costa Rican monkeys. They speed through trees using their forelimbs and tail in a brachiating fashion. Their limbs are long and slender, and they have fully prehensile tails-the most prehensile of all Costa Rican primates-that can support their full weight.

Their group dynamics are complicated and change in the course of a day. They tend to subdivide into small groups, most frequently of 2 to 3 individuals, but also into minitroop formations with an adult male, a few adult females and their young. At the end of the day these subgroups reconvene into a single unit at sleeping trees, at which point there are several adult males, juvenile males, adult females and offspring. Their total group size is usually about 20 individuals. Aside from gathering into this big group at certain feeding and sleeping trees, spider monkeys look for food independently or in their small groups.

A single troop requires a territory of 2.5 to 4 km2, so within their ranges they have a low population density compared to capuchins or howlers. Because spiders depend so heavily on fruit, which is harder to find than leaves, they need larger territories than their relatives.

Protecting these territories is only one function of their complicated communication system. They communicate using vocalizations, facial expressions, and posturing. Additionally, adult males secrete chemicals from their chest glands which they use to mark territories. Spiders have different calls associated with different situations: for example, barking rallies a mobbing conglomeration against terrestrial predators or territory invaders, and at least 2 types of long calls are used to coordinate troop movements. They use loud calls to bring the group together and to declare territory claim to other groups.

An infant spider monkeys stays close to its mother for 3 months, at first carried on the stomach then riding on her side as it ages. Babies remain at least partially dependent upon their mother's milk for the first year of life. Gestation lasts 225 days every 2 to 3 years; it is partly because of this slow reproductive time that spider monkeys are very sensitive to human disturbance, and their populations do not recover quickly when reduced by hunting or deforestation.

Diet
These monkeys are almost exclusively frugivores, but sometimes they will supplement their fruit diet with young leaves for additional plant-protein.

Height/Weight

Adults of both sexes can be more than 8 kg and 1.28 m long from head to tail-but the tail is longer than the body and head. Males may be slightly heavier and have a longer head and body length, but female tail length can exceed that of the male. Infants are 500 g at birth.

Taxonomy

Order: Primates
Family: Cebidae

Sources
Eisenberg, John. Mammals of the Neotropics, Vol. 1. The University of Chicago Press: Chicago, 1989.
Eisenberg, J. F. in Janzen, Daniel H. Costa Rican Natural History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983.
Wilson, D. E. in Janzen, Daniel H. Costa Rican Natural History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983.

Costa Rica locations where the Spider Monkey can be viewed

Cano Negro Wildlife Refuge ~ La Selva Reserve and Biological Station ~ Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve ~ Santa Rosa National Park

Destinations

All Travel Destinations

Beaches

Cloud Forests

Rain Forests

Volcanos

Mountains

Cities

Waterfalls

Airports

National Parks

National Reserves

Rivers

Regions

Costa Rica Regions

Nicoya Peninsula

Guanacaste

Central Valley

Central Pacific

South Pacific

South Central

Caribbean

Northern Lowlands

Central Highlands

Costa Rica Info

Costa Rica Maps

Costa Rica History

A Sustainable Future

Weather Forecast

Biodiversity

Amphibians

Birds

Mammals

Reptiles

Sea Mammals

Photo Journal

Costa Rica votes on CAFTA


Volcano Arenal in Photos


Independence Day Photos

(888) 456-3212

Costa Rica Travel

Costa Rican Birds

Costa Rican Mammals

Costa Rican Sea Mammals

Travel Assistance

Search Site

Spider Monkey Photos

Click thumbnails to enlarge photos

All Costa Rica Mammals Birds

Bananaquit

Bare-necked Umbrellabird

Brown Pelican

Chestnut-headed Oropendola

Chestnut-mandibled Toucan

Fiery-billed Aracari and Collare

Great Green Macaw

Green Heron

Keel-billed Toucan

Long-tailed Hermit

Long-tailed-Manakin

Magnificent-Frigatebird

Resplendent Quetzal

Scarlet Macaw

Three-wattled Bellbird

Turquoise-browed Motmot

Violet Sabrewing