In 1901, Oldfield Thomasdescribed two skins of Ruwenzori colobus zoological specimens that were collected at the northwestern slopes of the Ruwenzori Mountains in Bwamba Country of western Uganda. Thomas considered it a species using the scientific name Colobus ruwenzorii.[3]
Characteristics
The Ruwenzori colobus is black with hair on the shoulders between 23 and 33 cm (9.1 and 13.0 in) long. Its tail is also black and greyish-white at the end. It has white bushy tufts on the cheeks.[3] The white hair on the forehead forms a crest.[2]
Some authors reports indicate that it perhaps also occurs in some Tanzanian regions.[6]
Ecology and behaviour
The Ruwenzori colobus is a highly arboreal and acrobatic leaf-eater. Its diet consists of about two thirds of leaves and one third of fruit and seeds.[7]
Although all Colobus species are very sociable, they usually move on the troops of several hundred animals.[7]
^Arseneau-Robar, T. J. M.; Joyce, M. M.; Stead, S. M.; Teichroeb, J. A. (2018). "Proximity and grooming patterns reveal opposite-sex bonding in Rwenzori Angolan colobus monkeys (Colobus angolensis ruwenzorii)". Primates. 59 (3): 267–279. doi:10.1007/s10329-017-0643-6. PMID29270880. S2CID1413775.
^Ministère des Terres, de l’Environnement, de l’Eau, des Forêts et des Mines (2005). "Conditions propres aux pays"(PDF). Communication Nationale Initiale relative à la Convention – Cadre des Nations Unies sur les Changements climatiques. Kigali, Rwanda: Republique du Rwanda. pp. 25–48.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)