In lemurs, the higher taxonomic groups represent major differences in ecological adaptations. For the most part, the Cheirogaleidae, Lepilemuridae, Lemuridae, Indriidae, and Daubentoniidae all have very different habitat preferences and diets from one another. However, among closely related species
The extinct sloth lemurs of Madagascar
β Scribed by Laurie R. Godfrey; William L. Jungers
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 360 KB
- Volume
- 12
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1060-1538
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Paleontological expeditions to Madagascar over the past two decades have yielded large quantities of bones of extinct lemurs. These include abundant postcranial and cranial remains of new species belonging to a group of giant extinct lemurs that we have called sloth lemurs due to their remarkable postcranial convergence with arboreal sloths. New fossils have come from a variety of locations in Madagascar, including caves in the Northwest (Anjohibe) and the Ankarana Massif, located in the extreme north, as well as pits in the karstic plains near Toliara in southwestern Madagascar. The most spectacular of these is the extremely deep pit (>100 m) called Ankilitelo, the βplace of the three kily trees.β These new materials provide insights into the adaptive diversity and evolution of sloth lemurs. New carpal and pedal bones, as well as vertebrae and other portions of the axial skeletons, allow better reconstruction of the positional behavior of these animals. New analytical tools have begun to unlock the secrets of lifeβhistory adaptations of the Palaeopropithecidae, making explicit exactly what they had in common with their relatives, the Indriidae. Paleoecological research has elucidated the contexts in which they lived and the likely causes of their disappearance.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Xenarthra (Edentata) is an extremely diverse mammalian order whose modern representatives are the armadillos, anteaters, and sloths. The phylogeny of these groups is poorly resolved. This is particularly true for the sloths (phyllophagans), originally a large and diverse group now reduced to two gen
This study examines segregation of seven lemur species in an eastern rainforest of Madagascar by a numerical analysis of microhabitats using structural and phenological data. These data are combined with the results of a previous study on food selection by these species in relation to plant chemistr