The Atlantic titi is part of the genus
Callicebus which is composed of thirteen species and sixteen subspecies. Some more recent classifications of titis recognise many more species, and split the genus into three separate genera. The
C. personatus group is retained in
Callicebus. Three subspecies of
Callicebus personatus have been described in scientific literature:
C.p. melanochir,
C.p. nigrifrons, and
C.p. personatus, each of which has been treated as a full species by some authors. Atlantic titis are territorial, middle-sized, cebid monkeys; usually 1–2 kg in size.
C. personatus are found primarily in the humid forests east of the Andes Mountains, specifically in the coastal, inland forests of south-eastern Brazil. The states they have been documented to dwell within include
Bahia,
Espírito Santo,
Minas Gerais,
Rio de Janeiro, and
São Paulo. Of all the
Callicebus species, Atlantic titi monkeys have the largest geographic range except for
C. torquatus, covering approximately 1,000 kilometers. They customarily share their living area with other monkeys such as the
lion tamarin and
spider monkey.
Subspecies variations The three subspecies of
Callicebus personatus are products of clinical differentiation (when certain portions of the population are cut off from the parental stock due to an ecological barrier such as a river and are thus completely genetically isolated from one another). Distinctions between each of the
Callicebus subspecies are based on coat color. The evolution of these coat colors is termed metachromism. The pigments are produced by
melanocytes which deposit the pigments into the
medulla of growing hair so that the hair grows with the color of that distinct pigment. The characteristic pigment of the
Callicebus is
eumelanin (dark brown or black) found in the iris, skin, and hair (usually on the forehead, crown and tail). ==Diet==