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Cotton-Top Tamarins About the size of a squirrel, the cotton-top tamarin is a New World primate that is noted for its shock of white hair. The large shock of white fur on its head gives the cotton-top tamarin its most appropriate name. Males and females are not sexually dimorphic weighing approximately 404-417 g in the wild to 565-700 g in captivity (Savage 1990; Savage et al. 1993). Knee-to-heel length (M=7.26 cm) and head to tail length (M=23.07 cm) appear to be similar for both wild and captive cotton-top tamarins (see Savage 1990 for a complete review). The face of the cotton-top tamarin is black, temples and sides of head are covered with short adpressed silvery hairs. The face is adorned with grayish or whitish supraorbital band, with a grayish fringe across the muzzle to each corner of the mouth. There is a wedge-shaped midfrontal white crest. The dorsal surface of the body is primarily black or brown, while the underparts of the body, arms, and legs are predominantly white (Hershovitz 1977).
Roads and agriculture threaten the remaining habitat of the cotton-top tamarin
Significant advances have been made in developing self-sustaining captive breeding populations in both laboratories and zoos. Most laboratory facilities have reduced their populations significantly in the last 10 years, however, the U.S. zoo population has continued to thrive. Through the efforts of the American Zoo and Aquarium Association Species Survival Plan more than 300 cotton-top tamarins are cooperatively managed in more than 80 U.S. zoos. Cotton-top Tamarin SSP
Cotton-top tamarins have an extremely limited distribution, occurring in northwestern Colombia between the Atrato River and the Magdalena River, in the Departments of Atlantico, Sucre, Cordoba, western Bolivar, northwestern Antiquoia, and northeastern Choco, from sea level up to 1500 meters (Mast et al. 1993; Hershkovitz 1977; Hernandez-Camacho and Cooper 1976). The tamarins are found in regions of humid tropical forest at an elevation ranging from 200-1000 m, where the annual rainfall is between 2000-4000 mm. Populations also occur in dry tropical forest with low seasonal rainfall.
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