#callithrix jacchus
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snototter · 1 year ago
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A common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus) in Yorkshire Wildlife Park, UK
by John K Perry
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thoughtlessarse · 2 months ago
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A marmoset dangles upside down by its hind legs while eating a banana in Forte Duque de Caxias, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - Photograph: Bob Karp/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shutterstock
Click source for more Week in Wildlife photos.
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wouas · 9 days ago
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Hehe Look at this little guy (He looked really old and full of fleas)
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mateuscosmeportfolio · 6 months ago
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Brasil Profundo - Nordeste (Cangaceiro)
design for Boss Life
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arthistoryanimalia · 2 months ago
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#MonkeyDay:
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Portrait of Cardinal Antonio Ciocchi del Monte (1461-1533) by Sebastiano del Piombo (1485/86-1547), c. 1512-5, in the National Gallery of Ireland collection (NGI.783).
His pet monkey is identifiable as a Common Marmoset (Callithrix jacchus), native to northeastern Brazil. Neotropical primates were unknown to Europeans before 1492; this may be the earliest example of one in a European painting.
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markhors-menagerie · 2 years ago
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Common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus)
One of the most distinctive new world monkeys, this marmoset is native to northeastern Brazil, but has also become an invasive species in other parts of the country. They live in a variety of wet, dry, coastal, and inland habitats. Their sharp incisor teeth are effective at gouging holes for tree gum and sap, which make up the majority of their diet, but they also eat insects, fruits, seeds, flowers, and other small animals.
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snnjsktch · 1 month ago
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Skull of Callithrix jacchus in watercolor
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scentedobservationking · 5 months ago
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You All Know The Sight
When: February 18, 2024 Where: Texel ZOO Oosterend Texel, the Netherlands
He gets to roam free in a rather large area, but he tends to return to this same spot.
Species: Common Marmoset (Gewone of witoorpenseelaapje) Latin name: Callithrix Jacchus Originates from the northeastern coast of Brazil. Current status: Least Concern
Did you know: …The Common Marmoset is a very small Monkey with a relatively long tail. …They are thought to have been intentionally and unintentionally released in Southeast Brazil. While the same country, they are considered an invasive species out of fear of genetic pollution of other Marmosets and their predations upon Bird nestlings and eggs. …Common Marmosets are the most common non-human Primates to be experimented on for medical experiments, more so in Europe than in the USA.
© Mouselemur Photography • Portegiesje Our work is copyrighted. Do not reproduce, copy edit, publish, transmit or upload in any way without our written permission. Send us a note or chat message if you want to use our work as a reference.
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thouhd · 1 year ago
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Callithrix jacchus, one of the world's most anthropomorphic animals.
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envato-marker · 1 year ago
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Loài khỉ Callithrix jacchus: Khỉ kỳ lạ siêu cute #capcut
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imsureitsaltru · 2 years ago
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Additionally, it's helpful to know which species your regional strains are adapted to. Foxes aren't equally likely to get rabies in every state, although it's still possible
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Africa: domestic dog (Canis lupus familiaris), jackals (Canis adustus and C. mesomelas), mongoose (Herpestes spp.)
Middle East and Asia: domestic dog (Canis lupus familiaris), red fox (Vulpes vulpes), ferret badger (Melogale moschata), golden jackals (Canis aureus)
Europe: red fox (Vulpes vulpes), raccoon dog (Nyctereutes procyonoides)
North America: raccoon (Procyon lotor), grey fox (Urocyon cinereoargenteus), striped skunk (Mephitis mephitis), coyote (Canis latrans)
South America: domestic dog (Canis lupus familiaris), crab-eating fox (Cerdocyon thous), marmoset (Callithrix jacchus)
Caribbean islands: domestic dog (Canis lupus familiaris), small Indian mongoose (Herpestes auropunctatus)
Eurasian and American arctic and subarctic regions: arctic fox (Alopex lagopus)
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So I'm putting this here as a sort of public service. If you have never seen a rabid animal before, and you think you can handle watching it, I think it's a good idea to watch this. It's pretty upsetting to watch, so big CW on it, because this animal is essentially "dead but still moving." This is end-stage rabies. There is no saving this animal.
Before this stage, animals may be excessively affectionate or oddly tame-looking which is part of the reason why seeing people feeding foxes is upsetting to me. These animals might be, or might become, rabid, and there's no way to know without testing, which involves destroying the animal. Encouraging wild animals to be that close to humans is generally bad.
I grew up in the woods, so unfortunately we saw an uptick in rabid animals every spring -- you'd hear there was a rabid bat in this neighborhood or a rabid fox in this one -- but as wild animals and humans cross over more and more, we will see this more and more.
Opossums and squirrels extremely rarely get rabies, and we don't know why. They think the low body temperature of opossums inhibits the virus. The most common animals which get rabies in the US are raccoons, skunks, bats and foxes. Any animal 'acting unusually' -- not skittish around humans, biting at the air or at nothing ('fly-biting'), walking strangely (they kind of look like they have a string attached to their heads and walk kind of diagonal like they're being pulled along, a lot of the time) -- should be treated as though it's potentially rabid.
If you think you have been exposed to a rabid animal, including 'waking up in a room where a bat has gotten into it and there's a fucking bat in your room', please immediately go to the emergency room. Do not pass go, do not collect $200. Post-exposure prophylaxis absolutely fucking sucks, it is a series of shots you'll have to get in two stages, it's done by weight, and it feels fucking nasty, but rabies is 100% fatal. I cannot stress enough how essential this is, having been through it.
Thank you for reading, I love everybody, the end.
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puravibenamastes-blog · 1 year ago
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No Ceará, variantes do vírus da raiva de saguis são encontradas em morcegos
Variantes do vírus da raiva detectadas em morcegos intimamente relacionadas com variantes presentes em saguis-de-tufo-branco (Callithrix jacchus) foram encontradas no Ceará, acendendo um alerta para a circulação do vírus, mortal para humanos. Os saguis são bastante comuns em áreas selvagens e urbanas no Brasil, muitas vezes sendo capturados e mantidos como animais de estimação. Leia mais…
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sabbathercio · 2 years ago
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Trilhas artificiais! Soin/Soinho/Sagui-de-tufo-branco (Callithrix jacchus) #biologia #biology #primatas https://www.instagram.com/p/Cof0_9ZPvWb/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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bansheehaunt · 2 years ago
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Marmoset (Callithrix jacchus)
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danieleoligon · 4 years ago
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aticketplz · 6 years ago
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二重くっきり
@浜松市動物園
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