It is hard to guess what a Colombian white-faced capuchin weights. But we have the answer:
An adult Colombian white-faced capuchin (Cebus capucinus) on average weights 3.01 kg (6.63 lbs).
The Colombian white-faced capuchin is from the family Cebidae (genus: Cebus). It is usually born with about 239 grams (0.53 lbs). They can live for up to 54.75 years. When reaching adult age, they grow up to 37.8 cm (1′ 3″). Usually, Colombian white-faced capuchins have 1 babies per litter.
As a reference: An average human weights in at 62 kg (137 lbs) and reaches an average size of 1.65m (5′ 5″). Humans spend 280 days (40 weeks) in the womb of their mother and reach around 75 years of age.
The Colombian white-faced capuchin (Cebus capucinus), also known as the Colombian white-headed capuchin or Colombian white-throated capuchin, is a medium-sized New World monkey of the family Cebidae, subfamily Cebinae. It is native to the extreme eastern portion of Panama and the extreme north-western portion of South America in western Colombia and northwestern Ecuador.The Colombian white-faced capuchin was one of the many species originally described by Linnaeus in his 18th century work, Systema Naturae. It is a member of the family Cebidae, the family of New World monkeys containing capuchin monkeys and squirrel monkeys. It is the type species for the genus Cebus, the genus that includes all the capuchin monkeys.Until the 21st century the Panamanian white-faced capuchin, Cebus imitator, was considered conspecific with the Colombian white-faced capuchin, as the subspecies C. capucinus imitator. Some primatologists continue to consider the Panamanian and Colombian white-faced capuchins as a single species. In 2012 a study by Boubli, et al demonstrated that C. imitator and C. capucinus split up to 2 million years ago. Although the Panamanian white-faced capuchin is the most well-studied capuchin monkey species, as of 2014 there had been no field studies of the Colombian white-faced capuchin.Two subspecies of Colombian white-faced capuchin are recognized:C. c. capucinus, from mainland South America and PanamaC. c. curtus, from the Pacific island of Gorgona, sometimes referred to as the Gorgona white-faced capuchin.Like other monkeys in the genus Cebus, the Panamanian white-faced capuchin is named after the order of Capuchin friars because the cowls of these friars closely resemble the monkey’s head coloration. The coloration is black on the body, tail, legs and the top of the head, with white chest, throat, face, shoulders and upper arms. The head and body length is between 33 and 45 cm (13 and 18 in) with a tail length of between 35 and 55 mm (1.4 and 2.2 in). Males weigh between 3 and 4 kg (6.6 and 8.8 lb), while females are about 27% smaller, weighing between 1.5 and 3 kg (3.3 and 6.6 lb). C. c. curtus has a shorter tail.The white-faced capuchin is found in the extreme north-western strip between the Pacific Ocean and the Andes Mountains in Colombia and northwestern Ecuador.C. c. capucinus has been listed as least concern from a conservation standpoint by the IUCN, while C. c. curtus has been listed as vulnerable.
Animals of the same family as a Colombian white-faced capuchin
We found other animals of the Cebidae family:
- Guatemalan black howler bringing 7.19 kilos (15.85 lbs) to the scale
- Brumback’s night monkey with a weight of 603 grams
- Black bearded saki bringing 2.97 kilos (6.55 lbs) to the scale
- Tufted capuchin bringing 2.76 kilos (6.08 lbs) to the scale
- Rio Tapajós saki bringing 2.31 kilos (5.09 lbs) to the scale
- Bolivian red howler bringing 6.61 kilos (14.57 lbs) to the scale
- Monk saki bringing 2.11 kilos (4.65 lbs) to the scale
- Mantled howler bringing 6.58 kilos (14.51 lbs) to the scale
- Spix’s night monkey with a weight of 873 grams
- Maués marmoset with a weight of 443 grams
Animals with the same weight as a Colombian white-faced capuchin
As a comparison, here are some other animals that weight as much as the Cebus capucinus:
- White-nosed saki with a weight of 2.8 kilos (6.17 lbs)
- Ground cuscus with a weight of 2.6 kilos (5.73 lbs)
- Japanese hare with a weight of 2.53 kilos (5.58 lbs)
- Crested mona monkey with a weight of 3.58 kilos (7.89 lbs)
- Omilteme cottontail with a weight of 3 kilos (6.61 lbs)
- Short-eared possum with a weight of 3.13 kilos (6.9 lbs)
- Mountain hare with a weight of 3.11 kilos (6.86 lbs)
- Sclater’s guenon with a weight of 3.07 kilos (6.77 lbs)
- Black lemur with a weight of 2.48 kilos (5.47 lbs)
- Palawan stink badger with a weight of 2.5 kilos (5.51 lbs)
Animals with the same size as a Colombian white-faced capuchin
Not that size really matters, but it makes things comparable. So here are a couple of animals that are as big as Colombian white-faced capuchin:
- Tailless tenrec with a size of 32.7 cm (1′ 1″)
- Thomas’s flying squirrel with a size of 34 cm (1′ 2″)
- Menzies’ echymipera with a size of 34.9 cm (1′ 2″)
- Cacomistle with a size of 42.5 cm (1′ 5″)
- Snowshoe hare with a size of 42.4 cm (1′ 5″)
- Central African oyan with a size of 37.9 cm (1′ 3″)
- Raffray’s bandicoot with a size of 34.6 cm (1′ 2″)
- Marbled polecat with a size of 31.9 cm (1′ 1″)
- Southern giant slender-tailed cloud rat with a size of 38.2 cm (1′ 4″)
- Selous’s mongoose with a size of 42.8 cm (1′ 5″)
Animals with the same litter size as a Colombian white-faced capuchin
Here is a list of animals that have the same number of babies per litter (1) as a Colombian white-faced capuchin:
- Canyon bat
- Melanomys caliginosus
- Painted bat
- Pygmy tarsier
- Small dorcopsis
- Mentawai langur
- Bougainville monkey-faced bat
- Edwards’s long-tailed giant rat
- Purple-faced langur
- Northern common cuscus
Animals with the same life expectancy as a Colombian white-faced capuchin
Completely different animals, but becoming as old as a Colombian white-faced capuchin:
- Bonobo with an average maximal age of 48 years
- Chacma baboon with an average maximal age of 45 years
- Pantropical spotted dolphin with an average maximal age of 46 years
- White rhinoceros with an average maximal age of 50 years
- Black capuchin with an average maximal age of 44 years
- Ringed seal with an average maximal age of 46 years
- Yellow baboon with an average maximal age of 45 years
- Bornean orangutan with an average maximal age of 60 years
- Asinus with an average maximal age of 47 years
- Short-finned pilot whale with an average maximal age of 63 years