Based on the
species and
subspecies proposed by Groves in 2001 and 2005, robust capuchin monkey taxa include: }} }} }}
S. flavius was only rediscovered in 2006. For example, Silva (2001) proposed a slightly different species and subspecies split in which, for example Azara's capuchun,
Sapajus libidinosus paraguayanus, is considered a separate species,
Sapajus cay, as are the large-headed capuchin and the crested capuchin.
Taxonomic history was considered a subspecies of
S. apella.
Philip Hershkovitz and
William Charles Osman Hill published
taxonomies of the
capuchin monkeys in 1949 and 1960, respectively. These taxonomies included all robust capuchins, described then as the tufted group, in the single species
Cebus apella, while three gracile (untufted) capuchin species were recognized. Over time, the original
C. apella was split into the additional species of robust capuchin monkeys recognized today. In 2001, Silva published a study in which he found greater genetic diversity among robust capuchins than among gracile capuchins. Silva's study also concluded that due to the differences between robust and gracile capuchins, the two groups should at least be placed in separate subgenera within the genus
Cebus, offering
Sapajus as the
subgenus name for robust capuchins. After further studies of the
morphology and
genetics of the capuchin monkeys, Lynch Alfaro, Silva and Rylands proposed elevating
Sapajus to a separate genus in 2012. == Evolutionary history ==