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Lemuridae Family -- True Lemurs



Ring-tailed lemur
Ring-tailed lemur
The largest family of lemurs includes the best known lemur species: the Ring-tailed lemur. The Ring-tailed Lemur is recognizable by its black and white banded tail much like that of a raccoon and is found in the dry and deciduous parts of Southwestern Madagascar. Unlike other lemurs, the Ring-tailed lemurs spends a good portion of its time on the ground.
Common Name Scientific Name Nocturnal
Eastern grey bamboo lemur Hapalemur griseus griseus
Western grey bamboolemur Hapalemur griseus ocddentalis
Lake Alaotra reed lemur Hapalemur griseus alaotrensis
Golden bamboo lemur Hapalemur aureus
Greater bamboo lemur Hapalemur simus
Ring-tailed lemur Lemur catta
Mongoose lemur Eulemur mongoz
Crowned lemur Eulemur coronatus
Red-bellied lemur Eulemur rubriventer
Common brown lemur Eulemurfulvus fulvus
Sanford's brown Eulemur fulvus sandfordi
White-fronted brown lemur Eulemur fulvus albifrons
Red-fronted brown lemur Eulemurfulvus rufus
White-collared brown lemur Eulemur fulvus albocollaris
Collared brown lemur Eulemur fulvus collaris
Black lemur Eulemur macaco macaco
Blue-eyed black lemur Eulemur macaco flavifrons
Black-and-white ruffed lemur Varecia variegata variegata
Red ruffed lemur Varecia variegata rubra

This table is derived from the Bradt Travel Guide to Madagascar 2001.

Brown lemur
Bamboo Lemurs
One of the most recently discovered (by Western science) large mammal species is the golden bamboo lemur (Hapalemur aureus), which was found on an expedition searching for the greater bamboo lemur (H. simius), which was believed to be extinct. The last known (at the time) greater bamboo lemur specimen died in captivity in the mid 1970's, and in 1986 an expedition was arranged to confirm that the species was extinct. The expedition found a previously undescribed bamboo-eating lemur with reddish gold fur, which was later named the golden bamboo lemur. Interestingly, Madagascar's forests support a third species of bamboo-eating lemur, the gentle bamboo lemur (H. griseus). These three species coexist by having specialized bamboo-feeding habits. The golden bamboo lemur, apparently tolerant of high concentrations of cyanide, eats the cyanide containing leaf bases, shoots, and piths of new growth Giant bamboo. The amount of cyanide consumed daily by this species is enough to kill three men. The greater bamboo lemur eats the mature pith of the same bamboo, while the gentle bamboo lemur eats the leaves of another bamboo species.




Copyright Rhett Butler 2003