How many baby Yellow baboons are in a litter?
A Yellow baboon (Papio cynocephalus) usually gives birth to around 1 babies.
Each of those little ones spend around 172 days as a fetus before they are released into the wild. Upon birth, they weight 709 grams (1.56 lbs) and measure 2.9 cm (0′ 2″). They are a member of the Cercopithecidae family (genus: Papio). An adult Yellow baboon grows up to a size of 1.72 meter (5′ 8″).
To have a reference: Humans obviously usually have a litter size of one ;). Their babies are in the womb of their mother for 280 days (40 weeks) and reach an average size of 1.65m (5′ 5″). They weight in at 62 kg (137 lbs), which is obviously highly individual, and reach an average age of 75 years.
The yellow baboon (Papio cynocephalus) is a baboon in the family of Old World monkeys. The species epithet literally means “dog-head” in Greek, due to the dog-like shape of the muzzle and head. Yellow baboons have slim bodies with long arms and legs, and yellowish-brown hair. They resemble the Chacma baboon, but are somewhat smaller with a less elongated muzzle. Their hairless faces are black, framed with white sideburns. Males can grow to about 84 cm, females to about 60 cm. They have long tails which grow to be nearly as long as their bodies. The average life span of the yellow baboon in the wild is roughly 15–20 years; some may live up to 30 years.Yellow baboons inhabit savannas and light forests in eastern Africa, from Kenya and Tanzania to Zimbabwe and Botswana. They are diurnal, terrestrial, and live in complex, mixed-gender social groups of eight to 200 individuals per troop. They are omnivorous with a preference for fruits, but also eat other plants, seeds, grasses, bulbs, leaves, bark, blossoms and fungi as well as worms, insects, birds, rodents and small mammals. All baboons are highly opportunistic feeders and will eat virtually any food they can find.Yellow baboons use at least 10 different vocalizations to communicate. When traveling as a group, males will lead, females and young stay safely in the middle, and less-dominant males bring up the rear. A baboon group’s hierarchy is such a serious matter, and some subspecies have developed interesting behaviors intended to avoid confrontation and retaliation. For example, males have frequently been documented using infants as a kind of “passport” or shield for safe approach toward another male. One male will pick up the infant and hold it up as it nears the other male. This action often calms the other male and allows the first male to approach safely. Baboons are important in their natural environment, not only serving as food for larger predators, but also by dispersing seeds in their waste, and their messy foraging habits. They are also efficient predators of smaller animals and their young, keeping some animals’ populations in check.Baboons have been able to fill a tremendous number of different ecological niches, including places considered adverse to other animals, such as regions taken over by human settlement. Thus, they are one of the most successful African primates and are not listed as threatened or endangered. However, the same behavioral adaptations that make them so successful also cause them to be considered pests by humans in many areas. Raids on farmers’ crops and livestock and other such intrusions into human settlements have made most baboons species subject to many organized extermination projects. However, continued habitat loss forces more and morebaboons to migrate toward areas of human settlement.The three subspecies of the yellow baboon are:Papio cynocephalus cynocephalus (typical yellow baboon)Papio cynocephalus ibeanus (Ibean baboon)Papio cynocephalus kindae (Kinda baboon)
Other animals of the family Cercopithecidae
Yellow baboon is a member of the Cercopithecidae, as are these animals:
- Booted macaque weighting around 2.75 kilograms (6.06 lbs)
- Mandrill with 1 babies per pregnancy
- Lesser spot-nosed monkey with 1 babies per pregnancy
- Sun-tailed monkey with 1 babies per pregnancy
- Preuss’s red colobus with 1 babies per pregnancy
- Mantled guereza with 1 babies per pregnancy
- Gray snub-nosed monkey with 1 babies per pregnancy
- Capped langur weighting around 11.21 kilograms (24.71 lbs)
- Ursine colobus with 1 babies per pregnancy
- Allen’s swamp monkey with 1 babies per pregnancy
Animals that share a litter size with Yellow baboon
Those animals also give birth to 1 babies at once:
- Swamp wallaby
- Mountain paca
- Chestnut-bellied titi
- De Vis’s woolly rat
- Dama gazelle
- Melanomys caliginosus
- Mexican free-tailed bat
- Three-striped night monkey
- Homo sapiens
- Koslov’s pika
Animals that get as old as a Yellow baboon
Other animals that usually reach the age of 45 years:
- Grey seal with 46.67 years
- Dromedary with 40 years
- Gray bat with 39.25 years
- Brown bear with 50 years
- White rhinoceros with 50 years
- Black capuchin with 44 years
- Ringed seal with 46 years
- Long-finned pilot whale with 45 years
- Harp seal with 42 years
- Narwhal with 40 years
Animals with the same weight as a Yellow baboon
What other animals weight around 15.82 kg (34.88 lbs)?
- Mérida brocket usually reaching 16.5 kgs (36.38 lbs)
- Indian crested porcupine usually reaching 14.3 kgs (31.53 lbs)
- Water deer usually reaching 12.73 kgs (28.06 lbs)
- Reeves’s muntjac usually reaching 13.5 kgs (29.76 lbs)
- North American beaver usually reaching 18.11 kgs (39.93 lbs)
- Hamadryas baboon usually reaching 14.97 kgs (33 lbs)
- Whiptail wallaby usually reaching 12.67 kgs (27.93 lbs)
- Peters’s duiker usually reaching 18.94 kgs (41.76 lbs)
- Black-fronted duiker usually reaching 14.44 kgs (31.83 lbs)
- Black wallaroo usually reaching 17 kgs (37.48 lbs)