Cytogenetic study of Callicebus hoffmannsii (Cebidae, Primates) and comparison with C. m. moloch.

2001 
: Callicebus is a neotropical primate genus divided into four or five groups of species. Species of the moloch group are distributed in the tropical forests of the Amazon basin. The karyotype of Callicebus hoffmannsii (moloch group) was studied by means of G- and C-banding, Ag-NOR staining and in situ hybridization of telomeric probes. C. hoffmannsii had 2n = 50 chromosomes, with ten biarmed and fourteen acrocentric autosomal pairs. The X chromosome was submetacentric and the Y chromosome was a minor acrocentric. Constitutive heterochromatin was detected in the centromeric regions of all chromosomes; in pairs 7 and 10, it was found in the distal regions of the short arms, and distally in the long arm of the X chromosome. Size heteromorphism in C-bands was detected in pairs 7 and 10. Ag-NOR staining revealed a maximum of three nucleolar organizers. Telomeric probes hybridized only at the terminal regions of all chromosomes. Additionally, a comparison was carried out between C. hoffmannsii and C. m. moloch (2n = 48), as previously reported. Both species shared gross chromosomal similarities diverging by a single rearrangement of centric fusion/fission. A high similarity between C. hoffmannsii and C. donacophilus indicated a close association between the moloch and donacophilus groups.
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