Critically endangered twin monkeys are born at the Chattanooga Zoo

A pair of critically endangered pied tamarin monkeys were recently born at a zoo in southern Tennessee.

The Chattanooga Zoo said the mother, Daphne, had given birth to the healthy twins early on September 19. With compact, dark faces, distinctive ears, adorably tiny tails, and white and brown fur, the babies each weighed around a pound and will grow to be roughly a foot long.

“We’ve received a lot of positive feedback from people seeing the babies. Obviously, they’re adorable. They ride around on their parents’ backs and their siblings’ backs, which is really fun to watch,” Jake Cash, the zoo’s director of marketing and communications, told The Independent Wednesday. “You care more about something you can see and something that you can understand,” he noted.

A close up image captures the expressive face of one of the newborn pied tamarins as it snuggles on the back of another monkey. (Chattanooga Zoo)
A close up image captures the expressive face of one of the newborn pied tamarins as it snuggles on the back of another monkey. (Chattanooga Zoo)

Pied tamarins are part of the Callitrichidae primate family, which includes marmosets and many of the world’s smallest primates.

The zoo is one of just six US institutions that house the species. The facility first received pied tamarins in 2009, with the arrival of male Sammy and female Diddler. However, it was only in 2016 that Sammy was able to reproduce. Another pied tamarin, Zafra, gave birth to Dudley. Dudley and Daphne later birthed Crash and Eddy. These new babies are also Daphne and Dudley’s offspring.

The zoo hopes that Carly and Belen, another breeding pair, will produce more babies in the coming months.

The new babies are not yet named, and the zoo is asking for help from the public. The pair could be named for characters from the TV show Avatar the Last Airbender, The Lord of the Rings books or for cherry and apple pie. The names will be announced in mid-November.

A small pied tamarin tail is seen in this close up shot of one of the babies. (Chattanooga Zoo)
A small pied tamarin tail is seen in this close up shot of one of the babies. (Chattanooga Zoo)

Later in the year, when the babies are about three months old, the zoo’s veterinary staff will perform routine health checks and determine the animals’ genders. They’ll receive tetanus and other vaccine shots.

“If there was a problem, we’d examine them sooner. But, mom is very protective. This is a female-dominant species and she is a rattlesnake,” zoo veterinarian Dr. Tony Ashley said. “She’s very, very protective of her babies.”

During the winter months, they’ll be kept in an indoor enclosure, and will continue to start exploring their environment more.

“I’ve caught them playing with each other and playing in a blanket and everything. So, they definitely are starting to explore and do more things,” Ashley said.

Pied tamarins, on average, live for a decade or sometimes into their late teens in human care. They are very expressive creatures, using a variety of vocalizations and gestures.

Another close up photo shows the pied tamarin family at the Chattanooga Zoo. (Chattanooga Zoo)
Another close up photo shows the pied tamarin family at the Chattanooga Zoo. (Chattanooga Zoo)

In the wild, they are only found in a small area of the Brazilian Rainforest around the city of Manaus. They play an important role in their ecosystem by eating pests and spreading seeds, but have one of the smallest ranges of any primate species.

Pied tamarins are threatened by rapid deforestation, urban expansion, and the exotic pet trade.

While they are “awful pets,” Ashely said they are much more common than they were 15 years ago.

“All the groups of marmosets and tamarins have become very popular primate pets. When I was in private practice 20 years ago, if you saw a primate they were a rhesus monkey or something from Friends,” he said. “But, in the last five to 10 years, they’re almost exclusively small monkeys.”

Pied tamarins are also susceptible to human herpes simplex virus, which can be fatal, and the zoo takes extra precautions to protect them from infection.

It is unknown how many pied tamarins remain in the wild. They are listed as “critically endangered” on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. The monkeys could go extinct in a matter of decades and pied tamarins are expected to decline by 80 percent or more in the next eight years.