Page:The naturalist on the River Amazons 1863 v2.djvu/333

 forests lying opposite to the mouth of the river which leads to Fonteboa, and ranges thence to the banks of the Uatí-paraná, the most westerly channel of the Japurá, situated near Tunantins. Beyond that point to the west there is no trace of either the red or the white form, nor of any other allied species. Neither do they pass to the eastward of the main mouth of the Japurá, or to the south shore of the Solimoens. How far they range northwards along the banks of the Japurá, I could not precisely ascertain; Senhor Chrysostomo, however, assured me that at 180 miles from the mouth of this river, neither white nor red Uakarí is found, but that a third, black-faced and gray-haired species, takes their place. I saw two adult individuals of Brachyurus rubicundus at Ega, and a young one at Fonteboa; but was unable to obtain specimens myself, as the forests were inundated at the time I visited their locality. I was surprised to find the hair of the young animal much paler in colour than that of the adults, it being of a sandy and not of a brownish-red hue, and consequently did not differ very much from that of the white species; the two forms, therefore, are less distinct from each other in their young than in their adult states. The fact of the range of these singular monkeys being so curiously limited as here described, cannot be said to be established until the country lying between the northern shore of the Solimoens and New Granada be well explored, but there can be no doubt of the separation of the two forms in the Delta lands of the Japurá, and this is a most instructive fact in the geographical distribution of animals.