Characteristics and use of sleeping sites in Aotus (Cebidae: Primates) in the Amazon lowlands of Peru

Am J Primatol. 1986;11(4):319-331. doi: 10.1002/ajp.1350110403.

Abstract

In the Amazon lowlands of Peru, Aotus nancymai and A. vociferans were observed to use four different types of sleeping sites: (1) holes in the trunks and branches of dry or senescent trees; (2) concavities in polyaxial branching nodes of trees protected by dense entanglements of creepers, climbing plants, vines, and masses of diverse epiphytes; (3) complex sites among masses of epiphytes, climbers, and vines; and (4) simple sites among thickets and dense foliage. Each type is described. There was competition and sharing of sleeping holes between Aotus and other nocturnal arboreal mammals.

Keywords: Aotus nancymai; Aotus vociferans; forest strata.