Find results that contain all of your keywords. Content filter is on. Search will return best illustrations, stock vectors and clipart.
Make it so!
You have chosen to exclude "" from your results.

Choose orientation:

Wildlife: Black Howler Monkeys Sleep And Eat In Trees Most Of Their Time Royalty-Free Stock Photography


Wildlife: Black Howler Monkeys sleep and eat in trees most of their time Stock Photo
Designed by
Title
Wildlife: Black Howler Monkeys sleep and eat in trees most of their time #163676441
Description

The Guatemalan black howler or Yucatán black howler, Alouatta pigra is a species of howler monkey, a type of New World monkey, from Central America. It is found in Belize, Guatemala and Mexico, in and near the Yucatan Peninsula. It lives in evergreen, semideciduous and lowland rainforests. It is also known as the baboon in Belize, although it is not close related to the baboons in Africa. The Guatemalan black howler is the largest of the howler monkey species and one of the largest of the New World monkeys. Guatemalan black howler males are larger than those of any other Central American monkey species. The Guatemalan black howler shares several adaptations with other species of howler monkey that allow it to pursue a folivorous diet most leaves. Its molars have high shearing crests, to help it eat the leaves, and the male of the species has an enlarged hyoid bone near the vocal cords. This hyoid bone amplifies the male howler`s calls, allowing it to locate other males without expending much energy, which is important, since leaves are a low-energy food. Howling occurs primari at dawn and at dusk. The Guatemalan black howler is diurnal and arboreal. It lives in groups of general one or two adult males, with a ratio of about 1.3 females for every male. The Guatemalan black howler`s diet includes most leaves and fruit. Flowers also make up a small part of the diet. The breadnut tree can provide as much as 86% of the monkey`s diet during some seasons.