Ungulates
Many rain forest-dwelling ungulates - animals with hooves - are herbivores, including the tapir of South America, which consumes herbaceous vegetation and fruit, especially bananas. Able swimmers, tapirs also feed on aquatic plants. The rain forests of Latin America are home also to the pig-like collard peccary, which eats tubers and bulbs.
The okapi - the giraffe's only living relative - inhabits the tropical rain forests of the Democratic Republic of Congo in Africa. Okapis feed on buds and young leaves. Two types of antelopes or duikers - the little blue duiker and the yellow-backed duiker - dwell in the African rain forests. The former is found in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda; the latter is more widespread.
Rodents
The world's largest rodent, the capybara, eats grasses and aquatic plants in the rain forests of South America, which are also home to agoutis, rodents that feed on fallen fruits and nuts. A keen auditory sense allows agoutis to hear fruit hitting the ground; sharp incisor teeth make them the only animals capable of opening Brazilian nuts. Acouchis, which are related to agoutis, feed on grass, roots, stems, leaves and fruit. They occur in the rain forests of Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Brazil. Porcupines, found in a variety of habitats including rain forests, are also herbivores.
Primates
A few rain forest-dwelling primates are herbivores, including gorillas. Found in the equatorial rain forests of Africa, gorillas feed on all plant parts. The rain forests of western Africa are also home to the omnivorous mandrill, the largest monkey. Mandrills' diets include seeds, roots, nuts and fruit. Moreover, most lemurs, a type of primate endemic to the rain forests of Madagascar, are herbivorous.
Black howler monkeys, found in the rain forests of southern South America, eat mainly leaves and fruit. The golden lion tamarin, endemic to the Atlantic rain forests of Brazil, subsists on fruit and nectar.
Sloths
The canopy of the Amazon rain forest harbors two-toed and three-toed sloths, herbivorous mammals that spend most of their lives hanging from trees. Young leaves, buds and soft twigs make up most of the sloth's low-calorie diet.
Reptiles
The rain forests of Central America and South America are home to the green iguana, a herbivorous lizard that rarely descends from the canopy. Green iguanas consume leaves, flowers and fruit. The giant Amazon river turtle subsists mainly on fallen fruits and seeds, although it also eats insects.
Birds
The South American rain forests harbor omnivorous birds such as macaws and toucans. The diet of the former includes nuts, ripe and unripe fruit, seeds, flowers, leaves and stems; the plant matter in the latter's diet is mostly in the form of fruit.
Africa's only true pheasant, the Congo peafowl - found exclusively in the rain forests of the Democratic Republic of the Congo - consumes fruits and seeds.