Black and White Colobus Monkey
They are known to be colobus monkeys due to the fact that they do miss the thumb finger. However your visit to Kibale will give you a chance to have a look at black and white colobus monkeys as they can be sited near the briefing area feeding on leaves, flowers, and twig as their major source of food. Colobuses live in territorial groups of about nine individuals, based upon a single male with a number of females and their offspring. Newborn colobuses are completely white.
Red Tailed Monkey
The red-tailed monkey, also known as the black-cheeked white-nosed monkey, red-tailed guenon, redtail monkey, or Schmidt’s guenon is one of the primate species that you may come into contact with as you head for you nature walk. Red-tailed monkeys are social primates that form groups that can range in size from 7 to 30 individuals. They normally feed on small insects, fruits, leaves and twig as their major source of food. They are very shy but friendly monkeys and can be sited near the Kanyanchu Tourist center as their common feeding area and mostly they are active during morning hours. The red-tailed monkey is usually black, red, or orange. Red-tailed monkeys are within the Parvorder Catarrhini and have nostrils that point downward which differs from the Platyrrhini which have nostrils that point to the sides. There are other features characteristic to this mammal as well such as the white nose and cheeks in the midst of black or dark grey body fur. Red-tailed monkeys also have very large, elastic cheeks which are used in gathering food and storing it in their mouths for safety.
Grey checked mangabey
The grey-cheeked mangabey, also known as the white-cheeked mangabey, is one of the 13 primates that you may not miss to site at Kibale. The grey-cheeked mangabey is a dark monkey, looking in shape overall like a small, hairy baboon. Its thick brown fur is almost black in its forest home, with a slightly rufus/golden mane around the neck. The sexes are similar, with the males slightly larger than the females and always in group of 5-30 individuals. It feeds primarily on fruit, particularly figs, taking other fruits seasonally, as well as shoots, flowers and insects.
Red Colobus Monkey.
The red colobus monkey are one of the colobus monkeys that you can see will in Kibale or bigodi swamp. They are very social monkeys and can leave in a large group up to 80 individuals but average always ranging as 20 to 40 members and the groups often establish a dominance hierarchy determined by aggressive behavior normally feeding on leaves, flowers and unriped fruits. Red colobus monkeys have overlapping ranges with other troops. Interactions between troops can be either tense, though passive, or violent, with one troop trying to supplant the other.
L’Hoest’s Monkey
The L’Hoest’s monkey (Cercopithecus lhoesti), or mountain monkey, is a guenon always sited playing around the Kanyanchu visitor’s center and are forest species. They have a dark coat and can be distinguished by a characteristic white beard, short, dark brown coat, with a chestnut color across the back and a dark belly. Its tail is long and hook-shaped at the end and they are born fully coated and with their eyes open.
Thomas Galago
Commonly known as bush baby is one of the common nocturnal seen in Kibale during night walk. They feed of fresh shoots, fruits, insects and small birds. Bush babies have longer hinge legs than the front legs which helps them to jump and land to another tree branch with wide open oval eyes that give them sense of vision during night, with ears like for a cat facing front wise. They are gray, brown, or reddish to yellowish brown, with large eyes and ears, long hind legs, soft, woolly fur, and long tails. Bush babies are also characterized by the long upper portion of the feet (tarsus) and by the ability to fold their ears. This they extract by gouging holes in trees and scraping the bark, using their toothcombs where they do hide during day time.
Potto
Just like bush babies, Pottos are also nocturnal animals always sited at night during night forest walk at Kibale. The close, woolly fur is grey-brown. The index finger is vestigial, although it has opposable thumbs with which it grasps branches firmly. Like other strepsirrhines the potto has a moist nose, toothcomb, and a toilet claw on the second toe of the hind legs. In the hands and feet, fingers three and four are connected to each other by a slight skin fold, while toes three through five are joined at their bases by a skin web that extends to near the proximal third of the toes. The potto moves slowly and carefully, always gripping a branch with at least two limbs, to avoid pretenders.
Olive Baboon
Baboons are one off the starbon primates that can be sited eith at Kanyanchu or along the road while driving through Kibale National Park. They are very social and can leave up to a troop of 150 individuals. Baboons are omnivorous and are always sited near trading centers and home looking for left overs to feast on. However baboons can snatch away your food in case you keep an eye away from them. Young ones are always in groups and playing together. However the newly born babies which are always black in look with pink face, are always around the back of their mothers. Baboons live in hierarchy, a dominant male always lead the group.
African Civet cat
African civet is one of the nocturnal cats that can be sited within the forest of Kibale during a night nature walk. They are normal detected by their black and white coat and their grey face, which along with the black band around their eyes, gives these animals a Raccoon-like appearance. The similarity is only heightened by the fact that the African Civet’s hind legs are quite a bit longer than the front legs, making its stance very different to that of a Mongoose. The African Civet is a solitary animal that only comes out under the cover of night to hunt and catch food. African Civets tend to be most active just after sunset but tend to hunt in areas that still provide plenty of cover.
African Elephant
Two types of African elephant do exist. The savanna elephants and forest elephants. Kibale do boost of having forest elephants since it is a forest park. It is the smallest of the three extant species of elephant, but still one of the largest living terrestrial animals. Like other elephants, they do carry tusk and the female takes 22 month gestation period. During chimpanzee, elephants are always seen within the swampy areas. Generally, these forest-dwelling elephants are smaller and darker than their savanna relatives, the bush elephants with much longer tusk and with trunk top lip and nose are elongated into a trunk that is distinctly more hairy than savanna elephants
Forest cape buffaloes.
Seen several time during chimpanzee tracking in the forest and is the smallest subspecies of the African buffalo. Cape buffalo weigh anywhere from 400 to 800 kg whereas African forest buffalo are much lighter, weighing in at 250 to 320 kg with reddish brown hide that is darker in the facial area, have much smaller horns than their savanna counterparts, the Cape buffalo, with horns rarely fusing together.