Gentle Lemur
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Gentle Lemur
The bamboo lemurs or gentle lemurs are the lemurs in genus ''Hapalemur''. These medium-sized primates live exclusively on Madagascar. Etymology Bamboo lemurs were first described by French zoologist Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire in 1851. Comparing their small size, proportions, speckled fur, and other traits to those of marmosets—then classified in the genus ''Hapale''—he named the genus ''Hapalemur''. ''Hapale'' derives from the Greek language, Greek word ἁπαλός (''hapalos''), meaning "gentle". In their discussion of lemur name etymologies, Dunkel ''et al.'' speculated that the once popular Common name, vernacular name for the genus, "gentle lemur", derived from the translation of ''Hapalemur'', despite their notoriety for being one of the most aggressive lemurs in captivity—an observation first noted in a letter by Dutch naturalist François Pollen published in 1895. More recently, the common name "bamboo lemur" first appeared in the mid- to late-1980s following ...
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Golden Bamboo Lemur
The golden bamboo lemur (''Hapalemur aureus''), or in Malagasy, is a medium-sized bamboo lemur endemic to south-eastern Madagascar. Description The golden bamboo lemur is crepuscular i.e. is a most active at dawn and dusk. It is about the size of a domestic cat and is long plus a tail of , and on average weighs . File:Hapalemur aureus 001.jpg File:Golden bamboo lemur (Hapalemur aureus) feeding.jpg File:Golden bamboo lemur (Hapalemur aureus) feeding 2.jpg Distribution The species is endemic to the rain forests of south–eastern Madagascar at elevations of . It is known from the vicinity of Ranomafana National Park (first discovery in 1986 by Patricia Wright), Andringitra National Park (discovered in 1993), possibly in a forest corridor that connects Ranomafana with Andringitra National Park. Ecology As its name indicates, this lemur feeds almost exclusively on grasses, especially the giant bamboo or ''volohosy'' (''Cathariostachys madagascariensis'') feeding on new shoo ...
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