logo

Welcome


AboutZoos, Since 2008





201215Jul20:55

Lemurs: world’s most endan­gered mammals !

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 15 July 2012 | mod­i­fied 05 Decem­ber 2012
Archived

Pri­mate experts from around the world have revealed the wors­en­ing plight of the world’s lemurs. Of all the world’s ani­mals liv­ing on the verge of extinc­tion, Madagascar’s lemurs are tee­ter­ing clos­est to the brink.

A new assess­ment of these pri­mates reveals they are prob­a­bly the most endan­gered group of ver­te­brates on Earth, beat­ing out all other mam­mals, rep­tiles, amphib­ians, birds and bony fish for the dis­mal distinction.

ARKive photo - Indri

Ninety-​one per­cent of the 103 known lemur species are threat­ened, con­ser­va­tion­ists con­cluded this week at a work­shop of the Inter­na­tional Union for Con­ser­va­tion of Nature (IUCN) Species Sur­vival Com­mis­sion in Anta­narivo, Madagascar’s cap­i­tal. Twenty-​three of the species are now con­sid­ered “crit­i­cally endan­gered,” 52 are “endan­gered,” and 19 are “vul­ner­a­ble” on the IUCN’s Red List of Threat­ened Species, com­pared to 10 per­cent, 21 per­cent and 17 per­cent, respec­tively, at the time of the pre­vi­ous assess­ment car­ried out in 2005.

The results of our review work­shop this week have been quite a shock as they show that Mada­gas­car has, by far, the high­est pro­por­tion of threat­ened species of any pri­mate habi­tat region or any one coun­try in the world. As a result, we now believe that lemurs are prob­a­bly the most endan­gered of any group of vertebrates
(Christoph Schwitzer, head of research, Bris­tol Zoo (UK), pri­ma­tol­o­gist and the IUCN advi­sor on Madagascar’s pri­mates)

Along with lorises and bush­ba­bies, lemurs belong to a group called prosimian pri­mates, defined as all pri­mates that are nei­ther mon­keys nor apes. Lemurs live in the wild only on Mada­gas­car; their ances­tors likely rafted to the island on clumps of veg­e­ta­tion and trees more than 60 mil­lion years ago.

Now, sci­en­tists attribute the rapid wors­en­ing of lemurs’ sta­tus to destruc­tion of their trop­i­cal for­est habi­tat on Mada­gas­car, where polit­i­cal tur­moil has increased poverty and accel­er­ated ille­gal log­ging. Hunt­ing has also emerged as a more seri­ous threat to the ani­mals than in the past. As Madagascar’s bio­di­ver­sity is its main tourist attrac­tion, the sci­en­tists noted that the loss of lemurs would only exac­er­bate the eco­nomic prob­lems that are caus­ing their demise.

A few of the most spec­tac­u­lar species labeled “crit­i­cally endan­gered” this week are the indri, the largest of the lemurs, a prac­ti­tioner of life-​long monogamy and a sacred species in Mada­gas­car con­sid­ered to be the ancient “brother” of humans; Madame Berthe’s mouse lemur, the world’s small­est pri­mate weigh­ing in at just 30 grams; and the blue-​eyed black lemur, the only pri­mate species other than humans to have blue eyes. The north­ern sportive lemur may be rarest of all, with just 18 known indi­vid­u­als left.

One small piece of good news emerged dur­ing the oth­er­wise grim work­shop: A pre­vi­ously unknown species of mouse lemur has been dis­cov­ered in the Maro­lambo area of east­ern Mada­gas­car. Its dis­cov­er­ers, Peter Kap­peler and his team at the Ger­man Pri­mate Cen­ter, have yet to for­mally describe or name it.

The above news item is reprinted from mate­ri­als avail­able at Live­Science. Orig­i­nal text may be edited for con­tent and length.

(Source: Live­Science, 13.07.2012)

UN Biodiversity decade
WWF Stop Wildlife Crime
Fight for Flight campaign
End Ivory-funded Terrorism
Support Rewilding Europe
NASA State of Flux

Goal: 7000 tigers in the wild

Tiger range countries map

Tiger map” (CC BY 2.5) by Sander­son et al., 2006.

about zoos and their mis­sion regard­ing breed­ing endan­gered species, nature con­ser­va­tion, bio­di­ver­sity and edu­ca­tion, which of course relates to the evo­lu­tion of species.
Fol­low me on: