Jem's Birding & Ringing Exploits in the Eastern Province and elsewhere in Saudi Arabia
30 October 2012
Hamadryas Baboon - Baha
The Hamadryas Baboon Papio
hamadryas is the northernmost of all the baboons and is distinguished from
other baboons by the male’s long, silver-grey shoulder cape (mane and mantle),
and the pink or red rather than black face and rump. They are large monkeys
with a dog-like face, pronounced brow ridges, relatively long limbs with short
digits, rather coarse fur, and a relatively short tail. The male is
considerably larger than the female, often twice as large, and has a heavy silvery-grey
coat, bushy cheeks, and large canine teeth whilst the juvenile and females are
brown, with dark brown skin on the face and rump. Males may have a body
measurement of up to 80 cm and weigh 20–30 kg; females weigh 10–15 kg and have
a body length of 40–45 cm. The tail adds
a further 40–60 cm to the length, and ends in a small tuft. They occur from
north-eastern Africa, mainly in Ethiopia, but also eastern Sudan, Eritrea,
Djibouti and northern Somalia as well as the Arabian Peninsula, in Saudi Arabia
and Yemen where it is the only native non-human primate. In Saudi Arabia they
inhabit arid sub-desert, steppe, hilly areas, escarpments at elevations of up
to 3,000 metres requiring cliffs for sleeping and finding water. They are
primarily terrestrial, but will sleep in trees or on cliffs at night. An
opportunistic feeder, it will take a wide variety of foods, including grass,
fruit, roots and tubers, seeds, leaves, buds and insects. The female usually
gives birth to a single young with the new-born having black fur and pink skin,
and is suckled for up to 15 months. Each adult male controls a small group of
females (a harem) and their young, and remains bonded with the same females
over several years, aggressively ‘herding’ any that wander, and retaining
exclusive mating rights over the group. The females will often compete to groom
and stay close to the male, and it is the male who dictates the group’s
movements. The Hamadryas Baboon is listed on Appendix II of the Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). Recent studies have suggested
that the population of Hamadryas Baboons in Arabia colonised the peninsula much
longer ago than previously thought, and shows a considerable amount of genetic
variation compared to the African population.