Golden Lion Tamarin: Difference between revisions

From Japari Library, the Kemono Friends Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
Line 16: Line 16:
|introduction='''Golden Lion Tamarin''' is a type of [[Friend]] that appeared in the original Kemono Friends mobile game.
|introduction='''Golden Lion Tamarin''' is a type of [[Friend]] that appeared in the original Kemono Friends mobile game.
|appearance=She has mane-like orange hair and dark green eyes, she has a furry orange collar and furry orange bracelets, she wears an orange ourfit decorated with yellow outlines of roses, she has a white short skirt and orange shoes
|appearance=She has mane-like orange hair and dark green eyes, she has a furry orange collar and furry orange bracelets, she wears an orange ourfit decorated with yellow outlines of roses, she has a white short skirt and orange shoes
|reallife=Despite being named "Golden Lion Tamarin", it's not a lion but is a monkey; it gets the name from its bright reddish orange pelage and the extra long hairs around the face and ears which give it a distinctive mane.  
|reallife=[[File:Golden Lion Tamarin, Pengo.jpg|thumb|upright=1.0|left| Golden Lion Tamarin at Wellington Zoo, Wellington, New Zealand.]]Despite being named "Golden Lion Tamarin", it's not a lion but is a monkey; it gets the name from its bright reddish orange pelage and the extra long hairs around the face and ears which give it a distinctive mane.  


The golden lion tamarin is typically around 261 mm and weighs around 620 g. There is almost no size difference between males and females. The golden lion tamarin has tegulae, which are claw-like nails. Tegulae enable tamarins to cling to the sides of tree trunks. It may also move quadrupedally along the small branches, whether through walking, running, leaping or bounding.
The golden lion tamarin is typically around 261 mm and weighs around 620 g. There is almost no size difference between males and females. The golden lion tamarin has tegulae, which are claw-like nails. Tegulae enable tamarins to cling to the sides of tree trunks. It may also move quadrupedally along the small branches, whether through walking, running, leaping or bounding.

Latest revision as of 21:08, 17 June 2024

Golden Lion Tamarin

Golden Lion TamarinOriginal.png

ゴールデンライオンタマリン
Character Data
AKA Golden Marmoset
Romaji Gōrudenraiontamarin
Debut Kemono Friends (2015 Game)
Animal Data
Scientific Name Leontopithecus rosalia
Distribution Atlantic coastal forests of Brazil
Diet Herbivore
Avg. Lifespan 14.2
Read More Golden Lion Tamarin
Conservation Status iucn3.1 EN.svg.png
Golden Lion Tamarin Nexon Game

Golden Lion Tamarin is a type of Friend that appeared in the original Kemono Friends mobile game.

Appearance

She has mane-like orange hair and dark green eyes, she has a furry orange collar and furry orange bracelets, she wears an orange ourfit decorated with yellow outlines of roses, she has a white short skirt and orange shoes

Series Appearances

Appearances In Kemono Friends Media
Media Role

In Real Life

Golden Lion Tamarin at Wellington Zoo, Wellington, New Zealand.

Despite being named "Golden Lion Tamarin", it's not a lion but is a monkey; it gets the name from its bright reddish orange pelage and the extra long hairs around the face and ears which give it a distinctive mane.

The golden lion tamarin is typically around 261 mm and weighs around 620 g. There is almost no size difference between males and females. The golden lion tamarin has tegulae, which are claw-like nails. Tegulae enable tamarins to cling to the sides of tree trunks. It may also move quadrupedally along the small branches, whether through walking, running, leaping or bounding.

Native to the Atlantic coastal forests of Brazil. They can be found in hilltop forests and swamp forests.

The golden lion tamarin is active for a maximum of 12 hours daily. It uses different sleeping dens each day. By frequently moving their sleeping nests around, groups minimize the scent left behind, reducing the likelihood of predators finding them. The first activities of the day are traveling and feeding on fruits. As the afternoon nears, tamarins focus more on insects. By late afternoon, they move to their night dens. Tamarin groups use hollow tree cavities, dense vines or epiphytes as sleeping sites. The golden lion tamarin tends to be active earlier and retire later in the warmer, wetter times of the years as the days are longer. During drier times, it forages for insects longer as they become more scarce.

The golden lion tamarin has a diverse, omnivorous diet consisting of fruits, flowers, nectar, bird eggs, insects and small vertebrates. They rely on microhabitats for foraging and other daily activities and tamarins will use bromeliads, palm crowns, palm leaf sheaths, woody crevices, lianas, vine tangles, tree bark, rotten logs, and leaf litters.

Golden lion tamarins are social and groups typically consist of 2-8 members. They are highly territorial and groups will defend their home range boundaries and resources from other groups; they emit "whine" and "peep" calls, which are associated with alarm and alliances respectively.

References

Mammal Friends
Anteaters
Giant AnteaterNorthern TamanduaSilky AnteaterSouthern Tamandua
Bats
Brown Long-Eared BatCommon Vampire BatDaito Fruit BatFraternal MyotisHilgendorf's Tube-Nosed BatHonduran White Bat
Bears
Bergman's BearBrown BearEzo Brown BearGiant PandaGrizzly BearJapanese Black BearKodiak BearPolar BearSpectacled BearSun Bear
Bovids American BisonArabian OryxBantengBlack WildebeestBlackbuckBlue WildebeestBuffaloCommon ElandGannan YakGaurHimalayan TahrImpalaMountain GoatMuskoxNilgaiRhim GazelleSable AntelopeSaiga AntelopeSpringbokTakinThomson's GazelleTibetan AntelopeTopi
Cattle AurochsGoshingyu-samaGuernsey CattleHolstein Friesian CattleJersey Cattle
Goat Alpine IbexMarkhorNubian Ibex
Sheep Dall SheepMouflonSheepSnow Sheep
Camelidae
DromedaryGuanacoHuacaya AlpacaSuri AlpacaVicuñaWild Bactrian Camel
Canids African Golden WolfAfrican Wild DogBlack-Backed JackalCoyoteDanzaburou-DanukiDholeDire WolfGolden JackalInugami GyoubuManed WolfRaccoon Dog
Foxes Bat-Eared FoxCulpeoGray FoxIsland FoxNine-Tailed FoxOinari-sama
True Foxes Arctic FoxEzo Red FoxFennec FoxKit FoxPale FoxRed FoxRüppell's FoxSilver FoxTibetan Sand FoxWhite Ezo Red Fox
Wolves Arctic WolfDingoEastern WolfGray WolfHokkaido WolfIndian WolfItalian WolfJapanese WolfMakamiMexican WolfMongolian WolfNew Guinea Singing DogTundra Wolf
Dogs CerberusDomestic DogDomestic Dog (Mixed-Breed)Ryukyu KenSiberian Husky
Cetaceans
Blue WhaleChinese White DolphinCommerson's DolphinCommon Bottlenose DolphinNarwhalOrcaPacific White-Sided DolphinShort-Beaked Common Dolphin
Deer
Axis DeerMooseMule DeerPère David's DeerReindeerRoe DeerSchomburgk's DeerSika DeerSouthern PudúWater DeerWhite ReindeerYezo Sika Deer
Elephantids
African Bush ElephantAfrican Forest ElephantBorneo ElephantIndian ElephantSumatran ElephantWoolly Mammoth
Equids Chestnut HorseDonkeyHipparionPrzewalski's HorseSeal Brown HorseTarpanWhite Horse
Zebras Chapman's ZebraGrévy's ZebraMountain ZebraPlains ZebraQuagga
Felids Saber-Toothed Tiger
Felines Asian Golden CatBlack ServalBobcatCanada LynxCaracalCheetahCougarDomestic CatEurasian LynxFlat-Headed CatGeoffroy's CatIberian LynxIriomote CatJaguarundiJungle CatKing CheetahMarbled CatMargayOcelotPallas's CatSand CatServalTsushima Leopard CatWhite Serval
Pantherines Black LeopardClouded LeopardLeopardPeach PantherSnow Leopard
Jaguars Arizonan JaguarBlack JaguarJaguar
Lions Barbary LionCape LionEuropean Cave LionLionMasai LionTransvaal LionWhite Lion
Tigers Bengal TigerByakkoGolden TigerMaltese TigerSiberian TigerSouth China TigerSumatran TigerWhite Tiger
Giraffids
Angolan GiraffeKordofan GiraffeMasai GiraffeOkapiReticulated GiraffeRothschild's GiraffeSivatheriumSouth African Giraffe
Lagomorphs
Domestic Rabbit
Hares Arctic HareEuropean HareEzo Mountain HareJapanese HareMountain HareSnowshoe HareTsukuyomi-No-Shinshi
Marsupials
Australian DevilCommon Brushtail PossumCommon Ringtail PossumCommon WombatEastern QuollGreater BilbyGreater GliderKoalaNumbatPademelonRed KangarooScaly-Tailed PossumSpectacled Hare-WallabySquirrel GliderSulawesi Bear CuscusTasmanian DevilTasmanian TigerThylacineWhite-Eared Opossum
Mustelids Honey BadgerJapanese BadgerJapanese MartenLeast WeaselSableStoatWolverine
Otters Asian Small-Clawed OtterEurasian OtterGiant OtterJapanese River OtterNorthern Sea OtterSouthern Sea Otter
Pigs
Buru BabirusaDesert WarthogDomestic PigGiant Forest HogJapanese BoarRyukyu Boar
Pinnipeds
Baikal SealBearded SealCalifornia Sea LionHarp SealHooded SealMediterranean Monk SealNorthern Fur SealRinged SealSteller Sea LionWalrus
Primates
Aye-AyeBlack-And-White Ruffed LemurBornean OrangutanBrown Greater GalagoCommon ChimpanzeeDe Brazza's MonkeyGolden Lion TamarinGolden Snub-Nosed MonkeyHamadryas BaboonIndriJapanese MacaqueKabanMandrillPatas MonkeyRing-Tailed LemurSlow LorisSun WukongVenezuelan Red HowlerWestern Lowland Gorilla
Rhinoceroses
Black RhinocerosIndian RhinocerosParaceratheriumSumatran RhinocerosWhite Rhinoceros
Rodents
Alpine MarmotBlack-Tailed Prairie DogBrazilian PorcupineCapybaraCommon DeguCoypuCrested PorcupineEurasian BeaverGambian Pouched RatJapanese SquirrelKyūshū Flying SquirrelLong-Tailed ChinchillaNorth American BeaverSiberian Chipmunk
Sloths
Linnaeus's Two-Toed SlothMegatheriumPale-Throated Sloth
Sirenians
DugongSteller's Sea CowWest Indian Manatee
Tapirs
Baird's TapirMalayan TapirMountain TapirSouth American Tapir
Viverrids
BinturongLarge-Spotted GenetMasked Palm Civet
Miscellaneous Mammals
AardvarkAardwolfBinturongChevrotainCollared PeccaryCrab-Eating RaccoonFossaGiant ArmadilloGiant PangolinHippopotamusHippopotamus GorgopsHyracotheriumMeerkatPink Fairy ArmadilloPlatypusPronghornRaccoonRed PandaRingtailRock HyraxSpotted HyenaStriped SkunkTemminck's PangolinWestern Spotted Skunk