Planet of the Lemur: 10 Beautiful Little-Known Species

Most people have heard of the Ring-tailed Lemur and could suppose that it is the only species. However, there are many varieties of Lemur, a lot of which are beautiful and incredibly rare. Take a look in to the planet of the lemurs and discover for yourself the wonderful diversity of this lesser known family of animals.

The Red-Ruffed Lemur

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This exquisitely colored species is critically endangered and part of its habitat in Madagascar has recently been made in to a National Park. This may at least ensure the survival of some of the species but as it is unable to tell where it is safe for itself, many of the animals live outside the park’s boundaries and are still prey to humans as “bush food”. Who could possibly bring themselves to eat this delightful animal in the full knowledge that it is nearing extinction?

The Blue-Eyed Black Lemur

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Does what it says on the label! Its name gives the game away but this unusual lemur has blue eyes, which gives it a distinctly spaced-out look. Due to deforestation on its home island of Madagascar it is thought that there are less than one hundred of these startlingly beautiful creatures left in the wild. As a number of plant species evolved specifically to be spread by this species, a whole eco-system is at the point of collapse.

The Black and White Ruffed Lemur

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This wonderful beast is not too good as a next door neighbor. Apart from the Howler Monkey it is thought that the Black and White Ruffed Lemur has the loudest call of all primates. It is the only lemur that has litters - all the other species produce a single young, one at a time. It is also notable for having a muzzle like a dog!

The Mongoose Lemur

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This shy creature lives in the deciduous forests of Madagascar but also spread to the Comoros islands. It is thought that man is responsible for the spread but the reason for its introduction to the Comoros is unknown. It lives in small family groups and gets nasty when it is discovered by other Mongoose Lemurs that are not part of its small family unit.

The Red-Fronted Brown Lemur

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The Red-Fronted Brown Lemur lives in two parts of Madagascar, the western coast and the east of the island. The behavior of the species in the two areas is slightly different. In the east a single male will dominate a group and no other lemur will mate with the females. In the east there seems to be much more of a share and share alike attitude adopted towards sex and who is allowed to reproduce!

The Red-Bellied Lemur

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This is one of the more tourist friendly varieties of lemurs and actually displays curiosity about their human visitors when the two species converge in Madagascar. They will even pose for photographs! It is classified as cathemeral, which means it is active during both the day and night ad as such is one of the few lemur species to do so.

The Crowned Lemur

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The Crowned Lemur has a lovely strip of red across its forehead, hence its name and does have the look of a small girl going to a party dressed as a princess! It lives mostly on the Ankarana Plateau of Madagascar and at the very most there are only ten thousand of them on the island. This is the lemur most likely to give birth to twins and it lives for around twenty years.

The Lac Alaotra Gentle Lemur

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This beautiful beast is a bamboo lemur, even though it doesn’t actually eat bamboo. It is the one and only primate that has adapted to living off papyrus reeds and it chomps it way through tem alongside Lake Alaotra. As such there are very few of these lovely and engaging creatures, although the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust does have a protection program underway in order to ensure the continuance of this (possibly sub) species of lemur.

The Golden Bamboo Lemur

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The Golden Bamboo Lemur does, however, actually eat bamboo. Shamefully, it too is on the list of critically endangered species and it is thought that there are less than a thousand of them alive in the wild. It eats more than enough cyanide each day to kill an average human but how it detoxifies itself against the poison is not known or understood at all.

The Northern Sportive Lemur

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The sportive lemurs are a whole different branch of the lemur family tree. They are strictly nocturnal and live in the trees most of the time. When on the ground they hop along in a way reminiscent of kangaroos. Sportive lemurs are solitary and although they look cute they will protect their territory with violence when they come across same sex interlopers. Like most of the species here they are endangered due to deforestation and man’s blind and willful intrusion in to their only habitat.

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15 Responses to “Planet of the Lemur: 10 Beautiful Little-Known Species”

  1. claris Says...

    On August 31, 2008 at 2:57 am

    nice one, interesting lemurs


  2. Unofre Pili Says...

    On August 31, 2008 at 4:03 am

    So nice and cute animals…


  3. IcyCucky Says...

    On August 31, 2008 at 7:05 am

    Just marvelous, and wonderful!


  4. Lauren Axelrod Says...

    On August 31, 2008 at 10:42 am

    The Red Bellied Lemur is hilarious. He looks like he’s putting on a show. Look at me, look at me!


  5. tonisan60 Says...

    On August 31, 2008 at 1:03 pm

    I love the big eyes of lemurids, thank you for this great article, my applauses


  6. 禾草唐楷 Says...

    On September 1, 2008 at 12:02 am

    so cute so lovly


  7. Ender Says...

    On September 1, 2008 at 9:45 am

    Just a word to add that lemurs only exist in Madagascar ^^


  8. RJ Evans Says...

    On September 1, 2008 at 9:47 am

    Thanks, Ender - but you are not quite correct. They exist on the Comoros as well - though were imported by humans many centuries ago (it is thought!)


  9. Mc marxa Says...

    On September 10, 2008 at 10:57 pm

    irs look lkie a tarsier in bohol,philippines..

    I hope you wtrie about cats.. heheh..

    lol


  10. Lost in Arizona Says...

    On September 11, 2008 at 10:01 pm

    My oldest daughter now loves this article. She watches a show called Zoboomafoo, which has a lemur in it. So I suspect now, that she’ll be asking to see the lemur “pictures” everyday now..lol.


  11. Eden Lemur Says...

    On September 16, 2008 at 7:09 pm

    This is an interesting article! (Although some of the lemur photos aren’t of the species listed. In particular- The first ‘Golden Bamboo Lemur’ photo is actually a female Red-Fronted Brown Lemur. They look completely different. :P)
    It’s great that you’re giving some lesser-known species some attention!
    Another uncommon fact: As of July 26th there are EXACTLY 100 recognized species/subspecies of lemurs! Not only is the amount impressive, but it’s amazing how it happened to be an exact number! :D

    Some of my favorite species are the Milne-Edwards Sifaka (Propithecus edwardsi), Crowned Sifaka (Propithecus coronatus), Sanford’s Brown Lemur (Eulemur sanfordi), the common Black Lemur (Eulemur macaco macaco), and the Furry-Eared Dwarf Lemur (Cheirogaleus crossleyi.

    The lemur on Zoboomafoo is called a Coquerel’s Sifaka, by the way!
    Oh, and as RJ Evans said, there are 2 species of lemurs found on the Comoros islands that were imported there on ships. There is the Mongoose Lemur, and the Mayotte Island Brown Lemur (Eulemur fulvus mayottensis).

    Seeing this article gets me switched into lemur-nerd mode, haha! :D


  12. thestickman Says...

    On October 31, 2008 at 6:38 pm

    Some of the cute little faces look very much like our ‘flying squirrels’ here in N. America…

    Nice. :)

    -thestickman


  13. Catherine South Says...

    On November 19, 2008 at 5:55 am

    Very interesting :)


  14. Karen N Says...

    On December 7, 2008 at 8:00 am

    Great article, the lemurs are adorable!
    I’m going to have to bookmark this one. My kid’s love the pictures and will probably want to look at them all the time:)


  15. Paige Says...

    On February 18, 2009 at 5:57 pm

    I love lemurs! I am doing a report on lemurs in my music class and I know how most of the lemurs homes are being distroyed and how they are on the path of extinction. :(


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