Primate Biology (May 2022)

Fur rubbing in <i>Plecturocebus cupreus</i> – an incidence of self-medication?

  • G. K. Theara,
  • G. K. Theara,
  • J. Ruíz Macedo,
  • R. Zárate Gómez,
  • E. W. Heymann,
  • S. Dolotovskaya,
  • S. Dolotovskaya

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/pb-9-7-2022
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
pp. 7 – 10

Abstract

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Fur rubbing, i.e. rubbing a substance or an object into the pelage, has been described in numerous Neotropical primate species, including species of titi monkeys, but it seems to be a rare behaviour. Here we describe a fur rubbing event in a wild coppery titi monkey (Plecturocebus cupreus) with Psychotria sp. (Rubiaceae) leaves observed and videotaped during a field study on vigilance behaviour between September–December 2019 in the Peruvian Amazon. Plants of the genus Psychotria contain a great diversity of secondary metabolites and are often used in traditional medicine. We suggest that the fur rubbing was an act of self-medication. This is the first record of fur rubbing in coppery titi monkeys in almost 4400 h of observation accumulated over more than 20 years.