By Janice Kalin | Project Leader
Thank you for your support and interest in helping to give more lemurs access to natural habitats at the Duke Lemur Center. Thanks to your generous donation, we have raised almost 90% of our goal to complete this project to provide more forest for our lemurs.
Bliss!
It has been three months of fun in the sun for our lemurs in their new forested enclosure! Rather, fun in the rain…… it has been an uncharacteristically rainy summer in Durham, North Carolina. However, the rain has not dampened the spirits of the lemurs in the forest.
Our little family of Coquerel’s sifakas has made the most of their 5.8 acres of forest. Lucius, Euphemia and Thrax have explored every tree, sampled all the yummy tree buds, and gorged on mimosa leaves! Typically, free-ranging Coquerel’s sifakas sleep as a family in a different tree each night. However, this family has found a favorite tree and always tucks in for the night in the same little ball of lemurs on the same branch.
It was reported last time that a family of crowned lemurs was scheduled to move into the forest, instead, a father and son duo of blue-eyed blacks were moved into the enclosure with the sifakas. Tasherit, the dominant female of the crowned lemur family is participating in some locomotion research and she is providing so much data, it was decided to keep Tasherit and her new little baby Zuberi inside for the rest of the summer. Tasherit is a very intelligent lemur and is enjoying her work with the researchers.
Hopkins and Hemsworth were the blue-eyed black lemurs selected to share the forest with the Sifaka family. Last season, Hopkins and Hemsworth shared a forest with a spirited group of ring-tailed lemurs and a docile group of Coquerel’s sifaka. The blue-eyed blacks were accustomed to living a life of dominance amongst species. They assumed life was going to be the same with this little group of sifakas. Unfortunately, Euphemia is not going to let this happen. She wants to be the dominant lemur in the forest. After a few initial discussions, Hopkins and Hemsworth have accepted their place on the dominance totem pole (the bottom!) and life is progressing peaceably.
Researchers are now able to increase data collection for Dr. Charlie Nuun’s sleep study. Please read more about this fascinating study here: http://lemur.duke.edu/lemurs-neck-bling-tracks-siestas-insomnia-2/
The sifakas will be able to provide data to assure researchers that the data that was collected in the spring while the animals were inside is consistent with data collected while they are living in the forest.
Thanks to you, we are able to provide these lemur families with 5.8 acres of forest to allow them to live like lemurs and to provide valuable data to our researchers. Thank you!
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