210 LEONTOCEBUS 



Marikina rosalia Reichenb., Vollstand. Naturg. Affen, 1862, p. 7, 

 figs. 25, 27. 



Midas leoninns Bates, Nat. Amaz., I, 1863, p. 98, (nee Wagner). 



Leontopithecus rosalia Gray, Cat. Monkeys, Lemurs and Fruit- 

 eating Bats, Brit. Mus., 1870, p. 65. 



Hapale rosalia Schleg., Mus. Pays-Bas, Simiae, 1876, p. 250. 



Type locality. "In Brasilia." 



Geogr. Distr. Forest of southeastern Brazil, Province of Rio 

 de Janeiro ; Upper Amazon. 



Genl. Char. Conspicuous ruff around face and neck ; tail bushy at 

 tip, as long as body. Sometimes the pelage varied with black, this 

 color appearing on the head, hands, feet and tail. 



Color. General color of head, body and limbs golden yellow, 

 darkest on head and limbs, and palest on tail ; face, hands and feet 

 purple ; long tufts of hair from inside of ears brownish black. 



Measurements. Tail to end of hairs, 345. Skull : occipito-nasal 

 length, 53; Hensel, 39; zygomatic width, 35; intertemporal width, 23; 

 median length of nasals, 1 1 ; breadth of braincase, 28 ; length of palate, 

 17 ; length of upper molar series, 12 ; length of mandible, 38 ; length of 

 lower molar series, 13. 



Bates, (1. c.) says he once saw a tame individual of M. leoninns = 

 L. ROSALIA?, which was even more playful and intelligent than (M.) 

 URSULA. In length of body it measured only seven inches, and was 

 friendly with every one in the house where it lived, and its greatest 

 pleasure was to climb about the persons of those who entered. When 

 he first visited the house, it ran to the chair on which he was sitting 

 and climbed on to his shoulder, and looking into his face showed its 

 teeth and chattered as tliough it would say, "Well, and how do you do?" 

 It was very affectionate with its master and would climb upon his head a 

 dozen times in an hour, and make a great show of searching for certain 

 animalculse. Of this species Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire knew of 

 one individual that distinguished between different objects in an 

 engraving. When shown figures of a cat and wasp, it was very much 

 frightened, but when it saw a grasshopper or beetle, it precipitated 

 itself on the picture and tried to seize them. 



Leontocebus LEONiNUS (Humboldt). 



Simla leonina Humb., Obs. Zool., I, 1811, (1815), pp. 16, 361, 



pi. V. 



