7 Fascinating Facts About Lemmur You Didn’t Know
Lemmur: Habitat, Behavior, and Conservation Status
Habitat
- Endemic to Madagascar and nearby islands.
- Occupy diverse habitats: eastern rainforests, dry deciduous forests, spiny scrublands, gallery forests, and montane forests.
- Some species are generalists (use degraded or edge habitats); others have very restricted ranges and specialized habitat needs.
Behavior
- Social structures vary: solitary (some mouse lemurs) to multi-individual troops (e.g., ring-tailed lemur groups of 3–30).
- Many species are cathemeral (active day and night) or diurnal; some are nocturnal.
- Communication uses vocalizations, scent marking (wrist, chest, tail glands), and grooming.
- Female social dominance is common across many species.
- Diets range from frugivory and folivory to insectivory and nectarivory; some species are dietary specialists.
- Locomotion varies: arboreal leaping (sifakas), vertical clinging and leaping, and terrestrial quadrupedalism (ring-tailed lemurs).
Conservation status
- Nearly all lemur species are threatened; Madagascar is a global biodiversity hotspot with severe threats
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