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| Subspecies: | Unknown |
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| Est. World Population: | |
| CITES Status: | NOT LISTED |
| IUCN Status: | Least Concern |
| U.S. ESA Status: | NOT LISTED |
| Body Length: | |
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| Jumping Ability: | (Horizontal) |
| Life Span: | in the Wild |
| Life Span: | in Captivity |
| Sexual Maturity: | (Females) |
| Sexual Maturity: | (Males) |
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Cercopithecus ascanius is an arboreal frugivore-insectivore that also feeds on young leaves. The species is found in moist lowland, submontane and montane forests, swamp, riverine and gallery forest, and forest mosaic. It occurs in secondary or regenerating forests, forest islands and plantations, and prefers forest edges. It is absent from the interior of primary forest (Cords and Sarmiento 2013).
Typical group size is 25–35 individuals (Cords and Sarmiento 2013).Five subspecies are recognised:
Cercopithecus a. ascanius (Black-cheeked Red-tailed Monkey): occurs in northern Angola and southwestern DRC, south of the Congo and Kasai Rivers below 500 m asl. North of this, some animals between the Kasai River and Lukenie River may be attributable to this subspecies (Sarmiento et al. 2001). The eastern and southern extent of its range are poorly known. The subspecific status of a population of C. ascanius in northern central Angola is not known, but is thought to be either C. a. ascanius or C. a. katangae (Sarmiento et al. 2001, Cords and Sarmiento 2013).
Cercopithecus a. atrinasus (Black-nosed Red-tailed Monkey): endemic to northeastern Angola, this subspecies has a small geographic range (ca 2,500 km², Cords & Sarmiento 2013) on the Lunda Plateau around Wamba and Lué Rivers. Type locality Zova (850 m asl). Although the type locality is near DRC, this subspecies has never been recorded from that country (Sarmiento et al. 2001).
Cercopithecus a. katangae (Katanga Red-tailed Monkey): occurs in extreme northeastern Angola, extreme northwestern Zambia, and southern and central DRC, west of the Lualaba River as far north as the Lualaba River and Lomami River junction. In the west, its northern limit is the junction of the Sankuru and Kasai rivers. The western limit in Angola is the right bank of the upper Kwilu (Cuilo) River. Occurs between 500 and 1,300 m asl. The subspecific status of a population of C. ascanius in northern central Angola is not known, but is thought to be either C. a. ascanius or C. a. katangae. See Sarmiento et al. (2001) and Cords and Sarmiento (2013) for further details of its distribution.
Cercopithecus a. whitesidei (Congo Basin Red-tailed Monkey): endemic to central DRC, mainly south and east of the Congo River, west of the Lomami River. The Lukenie River marks the southern boundary, although individuals with a similar phenotype are known from south of the Lukenie River (Sarmiento et al. 2001).
Cercopithecus a. schmidti (Schmidt’s Red-tailed monkey): occurs east of the lower Ubangi River and Lualaba River, north of the Congo River and east of the Lualaba River in DRC. Eastwards through southern Uganda (northern limit Victorian Nile), Burundi, Rwanda, central western Tanzania and southwestern Kenya (west of Eastern Rift Valley). Isolated populations are found in central northern Central African Republic and southwestern South Sudan (Sarmiento et al. 2001, Cords & Sarmiento 2013). Altitudinal range is between 400 and 2,500 m asl, but mainly >1300 m in the eastern part of its range (Sarmiento et al. 2001).
Transitional forms occur between whitesidei and katangae, katangae and ascanius, and katangae and atrinasus. There is a wide transitional zone between ascanius and atrinasus (Lernoud 1988, Sarmiento et al. 2001, Cords and Sarmiento 2013). Cercopithecus ascanius hybridizes with other species, including Cercopithecus mitis stuhlmanni, Cercopithecus mitis doggetti, and Cercopithecus denti (Struhsaker et al. 1988, Detwiler et al. 2005, Davies 2013).
There is an urgent need to assess the current geographic distribution and conservation status of C. a. atrinasus.




