fbpx
Wikipedia

Coquerel's sifaka

Coquerel's sifaka (Propithecus coquereli) is a diurnal, medium-sized lemur of the sifaka genus Propithecus. It is native to northwest Madagascar. Coquerel's sifaka was once considered to be a subspecies of Verreaux's sifaka, but was eventually granted full species level, and is listed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List due to habitat loss and hunting. In popular culture, it is known for being the species of the title character in the children's TV show Zoboomafoo. The species was named after French entomologist Charles Coquerel.

Coquerel's sifaka
CITES Appendix I (CITES)[2]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Primates
Suborder: Strepsirrhini
Family: Indriidae
Genus: Propithecus
Species:
P. coquereli
Binomial name
Propithecus coquereli
Distribution of P. coquereli[1]
Synonyms
  • damonis Gray, 1870

Description edit

Its dorsal pelage and tail are white, with maroon patches on the chest and portions of the limbs. The coat is generally dense. Its face is bare and black except for a distinctive patch of white fur along the bridge of the nose. Its naked ears are also black, and its eyes are yellow or orange.[4][5] The bottom of the lemur's hands and feet are black, while the thighs, arms, and chest are a chocolate brown. Like all lemurs, Coquerel's sifaka has a toothcomb, used for grooming and sometimes scraping fruit off a pit.[6]

Distribution edit

This species occurs at altitudes less than 300 ft (91 m) in the dry deciduous forests of northwestern Madagascar, including coastal forests.[7] It occurs from the Betsiboka River, up to the Maevarano River, and is common in large area between these rivers. Extensive surveys of the species' distribution conducted in 2009, 2010, and 2011 led to the confirmation of its presence in most forest fragments between these rivers.[7] Nevertheless, its eastern distribution limits are unclear. Between the Sofia and Bemarivo Rivers, the species has twice been reported to be absent (Table 1[7]). Similarly, the southern part of the inter-river system between the Bemarivo and Betsiboka Rivers, where little is known about the presence of the species, requires surveys.[7]

 
Map of P. coquereli distribution

Groups of this species have a home range area amounting to 4–9 ha (9.9–22.2 acres).[8] A 2014 work[9] in Ankarafantsika National Park suggests that population densities range from 5 to 100/km2 (13 to 259/sq mi) and significant (negative) effects of road and forest edge and/or a (positive) effect of river proximity on densities. The population size may be ~47,000 individuals in the Ankarafantsika National Park.[9] However, the species is frequently seen around villages and in areas dominated by introduced tree species.[7]

Diet edit

Coquerel's sifaka's herbivorous diet varies by season. In the wet season, it eats immature leaves, flowers, fruit, bark, and dead wood. In the dry season, it eats mature leaves and buds.[10] It may browse nearly 100 plant species, but the majority of its feeding time is concentrated on about 10% of these.[11] Since it has a very fibrous diet, Coquerel's sifaka has an enlarged cecum and extremely long colon that helps facilitate digestion.[12] These lemurs spend 30-40% of their day foraging, especially in the morning, midday, and evening. Females often take leadership roles during foraging and exert their dominance by eating the preferred food or denying the males food until they are satisfied. These lemurs are beneficial to the environment because they aid seed dispersion. Captive Coquerel's sifakas eat shining leaf sumac and mimosa.[13]

Behaviour edit

Coquerel's sifaka lives in matriarchal groups of about three to ten individuals.[7]

 
Clinging to tree trunk

It is diurnal and primarily arboreal. Much is known about its behavior from observations in the wild and in captivity.[12]

Social structure edit

Coquerel's sifakas spend the majority of their time in areas of just 2–3 ha (4.9–7.4 acres). However, they can live in areas with 4–8 ha (9.9–19.8 acres). Though their home range may overlap with other groups of sifakas, they avoid each other to avoid aggression.[14] When friendly Coquerel's sifakas meet, they greet by rubbing their noses together.

Matriarchy is rare in the animal kingdom as a whole, but common among lemurs. A matriarchal system is particularly pronounced in Coquerel's sifaka. All adult and even most subadult females are dominant over males.[12]

Females have preferential access to food and other resources. When a female is browsing an area or tree, a male waits for her to finish before he moves there to feed. If he gets in the way of the female, she may lunge, smack, or bite him. The male then exhibits submissive behavior by rolling his tail between his legs, chattering softly, and baring his teeth in a grimace before quickly leaping out of her way.[12]

When mating, Coquerel's sifaka commonly practices polyandry. A female may choose to mate with only one male, but most often she mates with several, from other visiting groups, as well as from her own. Males compete for access to sexually receptive females. However, the winner of a fight will not necessarily be the one she selects for breeding. The criteria by which she chooses a mate are evidently more complex.[6]

In some other animals, polyandrous mating is thought to raise the chances of successful fertilization, but this does not appear to be the case in Coquerel's sifaka. Instead, polyandry is thought to be advantageous because when paternity is confused, the likelihood of male infanticide decreases.[11]

Reproduction edit

Female Coquerel's sifakas choose their mate(s) whether from intragroup males or males from outside groups.[15] They have synchronized estrus in January and February.[12] Infants are born in June and July after a gestation period around 162 days. Normally, one infant is born during Madagascar's dry season (June–July). Newborn lemurs have an average weight of 100 g (3.5 oz), though it can vary between 85 and 115 g (3.0 and 4.1 oz). An infant clings to its mother's chest until about a month or so after birth, then transfers to her back.

Infants are weaned and become fully independent around six months of age. Adult size is reached at one to five years.[10]

Males and females become sexually mature around two- to three-and-a-half years old, though some do not have their first offspring until they are six. Hybrids have been known to occur with some species. One is P. verreauxi.[16]

Locomotion edit

 
Coquerel's sifaka in the wild at Anjajavy Forest
 
The terrestrial locomotion of Coquerel's sifaka

In the trees, Coquerel's sifaka moves by vertical clinging and leaping. It maintains an upright posture when at rest or when propelling itself between branches or trunks. This style of arboreal locomotion is characteristic of most, if not all, lemurs.[12] This particular lemur can leap from tree to tree up to 35 feet (11 m).[17] It has the extraordinary ability to leap to spiny trees and precisely place its hands and feet so that it will not hurt itself.

Occasionally, Coquerel's sifaka descends to the ground to cross open spaces. Its terrestrial locomotion is unique to its species. Like Verreaux's sifaka, it moves in a series of bipedal hops with its arms thrown out to the sides for balance. However, whereas Verreaux's sifaka bounds sideways and crosses its legs one in front of the other, the Coquerel's sifaka bounds forward, like a kangaroo. It leans in the direction of its jump to achieve forward momentum.[10]

A study at Duke University's Primate Center examined feeding behaviors of captive sifakas to determine their handedness. Given chopped fruits and vegetables, adult male and female sifakas showed a predominant preference for left-handedness, while younger sifakas alternated hands to grab food. Coquerel's sifakas gain dexterity and hand preference with age, diverging only slightly by gender.[18]

Communication edit

Coquerel's sifaka uses a variety of auditory, visual, and olfactory signals to communicate.[19] "Sifaka" is a Malagasy name that comes from the lemurs' characteristic "shif-auk" sound.[20] The first syllable is a low growl that "bubbles" in the throat, and the second is a clicking sound like an amplified hiccup. The "shih-fak" call is used to warn fellow group members of a potential ground predator or to threaten enemies and intruders. Coquerel's sifaka is highly territorial.[21]

Contact calls used when groups are traveling include soft grunts and growls. If a sifaka is separated from its group members, it may emit a long, loud wail to find them.[11]

One visual signal which Coquerel's sifaka uses to communicate is a rapid backward jerking of the head. This is a threatening action that may accompany the "shih-fak" call.[10]

Sifakas also rely heavily on scent for communication. Males typically scent-mark using a gland in their throats, which they will rub back and forth along branches. Females are more likely to scent-mark with anogenital glands. It is not entirely clear what information is conveyed in these scents, beyond the demarcation of territory.[11]

A study of sifaka vocalizations found that roaring barks are associated with anti-raptor responses in which the Coquerel's sifakas looked up and climbed down.[22] The "tchi-fak" vocalizations was associated with anti-terrestrial responses in which the sifakas looked down and climbed up.[22] And the meaning of growls seemed to vary by population, where a population subject to significant raptor predation associated the growls with anti-raptor responses, but another population associated growls with mild disturbance.[22]

Economic importance edit

Coquerel's sifakas, like many lemurs, have been studied to help scientists learn about the evolutionary history of primates, including humans. They have been the subject of those researching evolution of color vision, paternal care, matriarchal primate societies, and causes of speciation.[12]

Conservation status and threats edit

Though its populations are thought to be widely distributed, Coquerel's sifaka is found in only two protected areas in Madagascar - the Ankarafantsika National Park and the Bora Special Reserve. It is a critically endangered species, according to the IUCN's Red List of Threatened Species, and it is listed in CITES Appendix I.[2] The principal threats to its existence are deforestation, habitat fragmentation, and hunting pressure. The local people often clear trees to produce new farming land, especially in the marshes where rice can be grown. In northwestern Madagascar, deforestation results from annual burning to create new pastureland for livestock. Trees are also cut for the production of charcoal.[14]

Many local Malagasy traditions prohibit hunting of Coquerel's sifaka. One such taboo derives from a legend of a sifaka saving the life of a boy who has fallen out of a tree. The story goes like this:

A little boy heads into the forest to find some honey. He spots a hive in a high tree and he ascends it. As he is about to reach in to collect the honey, he is immediately attacked by bees. The surprise causes the boy to lose his grip on the tree branch, and he falls to what is almost certainly his death. As the boy plummets toward the earth, a large lemur suddenly appears, swoops in, and catches the boy, saving his life. Ever since that day, lemurs became sacred to the Malagasy and it is said that anyone who kills one shall have extreme misfortune.[23]

These protective taboos are breaking down with cultural erosion and immigration.[14]

This lemur is now hunted for bushmeat, but humans are not the only threat. The introduction of foreign species, especially cats and dogs, has hurt the Coquerel's sifaka. Projects for Animal Welfare encourages the neutering and spaying of the cats and dogs on the island to protect the native wildlife.[1] Even the protected areas where the Coquerel's sifaka occurs offer it little protection. It is hunted even within Ankarafantsika, and the Bora Special Reserve has become seriously degraded.[10]

Predation edit

Many animals prey on Coquerel's sifakas. Hawks and other raptors attack them from above, while constrictor snakes and the fossa threaten them from the ground. Introduced predators such as feral dogs, African cats, European cats, mongooses and civets also prey on them. However, of all these creatures, humans are the biggest hazard. Though killing the lemurs was taboo,[12] Coquerel's sifaka see humans now as a threat and may give out an alarm call to warn the others.[12]

Some lemurs are unaware of the danger humans pose and will approach humans on the ground. To intimidate predators they do recognize, the lemurs announce the threat with a warning call, and stare at the threat, shaking their heads back and forth.[24]

Cultural references edit

The titular lemur on the PBS Kids television program Zoboomafoo is portrayed by a Coquerel's sifaka[12] named Jovian. Jovian lived at the Duke Lemur Center, where the show was originally filmed until he died from kidney failure at the age of 20 on November 10, 2014.[25] His son Charlemagne, known as "Charlie", lives at the center, with his family group of other Coquerel's sifakas.[26]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Louis, E.E.; Bailey, C.A.; Sefczek, T.M.; King, T.; Radespiel, U.; Frasier, C.L. (2020). "Propithecus coquereli". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T18355A115572275. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-2.RLTS.T18355A115572275.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Checklist of CITES Species". CITES. UNEP-WCMC. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  3. ^ Groves, C. P. (2005). Wilson, D. E.; Reeder, D. M. (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 120. ISBN 0-801-88221-4. OCLC 62265494.
  4. ^ Kappeler, P. M. (1991). "Patterns of sexual dimorphism in body weight among prosimian primates". Folia Primatologica. 57 (3): 132–146. doi:10.1159/000156575. PMID 1794769.
  5. ^ Tattersall, I. (1982). The Primates of Madagascar. Columbia University.
  6. ^ a b Pochron, S. T.; Wright, P. C. (2005). . CBS. Archived from the original on 25 September 2015. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Salmona, Jordi (2014). "Extensive survey of the Endangered Coquerel's sifaka Propithecus coquereli". Endangered Species Research. 25 (2): 175–183. doi:10.3354/esr00622. hdl:10400.7/348.
  8. ^ Petter, J.-J. (1962). "Recherches sur l'écologie et l'éthologie des lémuriens malgaches". Mémoires du Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Série A, Zoologie. 27: 1–146.
  9. ^ a b Kun-Rodrigues C, Salmona J, Besolo A, Rasolondraibe E, Rabarivola C, Marques TA, Chikhi L (2014). "New density estimates of a threatened sifaka species (Propithecus coquereli) in Ankarafantsika National Park". American Journal of Primatology. 76 (6): 515–528. doi:10.1002/ajp.22243. hdl:10400.7/558. PMID 24443250. S2CID 11185235. Retrieved 18 Feb 2015.
  10. ^ a b c d e Mittermeier, R.A.; Konstant, W.R.; Hawkins, F.; Louis, E.E.; et al. (2006). Lemurs of Madagascar. Illustrated by S.D. Nash (2nd ed.). Conservation International. ISBN 1-881173-88-7. OCLC 883321520.
  11. ^ a b c d Richard, Alison (2003). "Propithecus, Sifakas". In Steven M. Goodman; Jonathan P. Benstead (eds.). The Natural History of Madagascar. Chicago: University of Chicago. pp. 1345–1348. ISBN 0-226-30306-3.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Oldenkamp, R. (2011). "Propithecus coquereli". Animal Diversity Web. Retrieved 18 March 2012.
  13. ^ Campbell, J.; Glenn, K.; Grossi, B.; Eisemann, J. (2001). "Use of Local North Carolina Browse Species to Supplement the Diet of a Captive Colony of Folivorous Primates (Propithecus sp.)". Zoo Biology. 20 (6): 447–461. doi:10.1002/zoo.10007.
  14. ^ a b c Garbutt, N. (2007) Mammals of Madagascar: A Complete Guide. A&C Black Publishers Ltd.
  15. ^ Kubzdela, K.; Richard, A.; Pereira, M. (1992). "Social Relations in Semi-Free Ranging Sifakas (Propithecus verreauxi coquereli) and the Question of Female Dominance". American Journal of Primatology. 28 (2): 139–145. doi:10.1002/ajp.1350280206. PMID 31941220. S2CID 84398797.
  16. ^ Taylor, L. (2008). "Old Lemurs: Preliminary Data on Behavior and Reproduction from the Duke University Primate Center", pp. 319-333 in J Fleagle, C Gilbert, eds. Elwyn Simons: A Search for Origins. New York: Springer Science Business+Media, LLC.
  17. ^ Iverson, Erik (26 July 2012). "Coquerel's Sifaka." 2012-07-12 at the Wayback Machine Mongabay.
  18. ^ Mason, Angela; Wolfe, Linda; Johnson, Jeffrey (1995). "Hand Preference in the Sifaka (Propithecus verreauxi coquereli) During Feeding in Captivity". Primates. 36 (2): 275–280. doi:10.1007/BF02381353. S2CID 21949388.
  19. ^ Greive, Bradley Trevor. Priceless: The Vanishing Beauty of a Fragile Planet. Kansas City, MO: Andrews McMeel Pub., 2003. Print.
  20. ^ Richard, A. (1978). Behavioral Variation: Case Study of a Malagasy Lemur. Cranbury, New Jersey: Associated University Presses, Inc.
  21. ^ Jolly, Alison (2004). . Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Archived from the original on 2005-03-04.
  22. ^ a b c Fichtel, Claudia; Kappeler, Peter M. (2011). "Variation in the Meaning of Alarm Calls in Verreaux's and Coquerel's Sifakas (Propithecus verreauxi, P. coquereli)". International Journal of Primatology. 32 (2): 346–361. doi:10.1007/s10764-010-9472-9. PMC 3047677. PMID 21475394.
  23. ^ Smith, Dave (29 December 2011). "Lemurs Killed, Eaten More in Madagascar as Taboos Fade." 2012-02-03 at the Wayback Machine International Business Times.
  24. ^ Fichtel, C.; van Schaik, C. P. (2006). "Semantic Differences in Sifaka (Propithecus verreauxi) Alarm Calls: A Reflection of Genetic or Cultural Variants?". Ethology. 112 (9): 839–849. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0310.2006.01239.x.
  25. ^ Jovian 2014-11-14 at the Wayback Machine. Duke Lemur Center
  26. ^ Duke Lemur Center. (2011). .

External links edit

  • Video of Unique Sifaka Movement

coquerel, sifaka, propithecus, coquereli, diurnal, medium, sized, lemur, sifaka, genus, propithecus, native, northwest, madagascar, once, considered, subspecies, verreaux, sifaka, eventually, granted, full, species, level, listed, critically, endangered, iucn,. Coquerel s sifaka Propithecus coquereli is a diurnal medium sized lemur of the sifaka genus Propithecus It is native to northwest Madagascar Coquerel s sifaka was once considered to be a subspecies of Verreaux s sifaka but was eventually granted full species level and is listed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List due to habitat loss and hunting In popular culture it is known for being the species of the title character in the children s TV show Zoboomafoo The species was named after French entomologist Charles Coquerel Coquerel s sifakaConservation statusCritically Endangered IUCN 3 1 1 CITES Appendix I CITES 2 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder PrimatesSuborder StrepsirrhiniFamily IndriidaeGenus PropithecusSpecies P coquereliBinomial namePropithecus coquereliA Grandidier 1867 3 Distribution of P coquereli 1 Synonymsdamonis Gray 1870 Contents 1 Description 2 Distribution 3 Diet 4 Behaviour 4 1 Social structure 4 2 Reproduction 4 3 Locomotion 4 4 Communication 5 Economic importance 6 Conservation status and threats 6 1 Predation 7 Cultural references 8 References 9 External linksDescription editIts dorsal pelage and tail are white with maroon patches on the chest and portions of the limbs The coat is generally dense Its face is bare and black except for a distinctive patch of white fur along the bridge of the nose Its naked ears are also black and its eyes are yellow or orange 4 5 The bottom of the lemur s hands and feet are black while the thighs arms and chest are a chocolate brown Like all lemurs Coquerel s sifaka has a toothcomb used for grooming and sometimes scraping fruit off a pit 6 nbsp nbsp nbsp juvenileDistribution editThis species occurs at altitudes less than 300 ft 91 m in the dry deciduous forests of northwestern Madagascar including coastal forests 7 It occurs from the Betsiboka River up to the Maevarano River and is common in large area between these rivers Extensive surveys of the species distribution conducted in 2009 2010 and 2011 led to the confirmation of its presence in most forest fragments between these rivers 7 Nevertheless its eastern distribution limits are unclear Between the Sofia and Bemarivo Rivers the species has twice been reported to be absent Table 1 7 Similarly the southern part of the inter river system between the Bemarivo and Betsiboka Rivers where little is known about the presence of the species requires surveys 7 nbsp Map of P coquerelidistributionGroups of this species have a home range area amounting to 4 9 ha 9 9 22 2 acres 8 A 2014 work 9 in Ankarafantsika National Park suggests that population densities range from 5 to 100 km2 13 to 259 sq mi and significant negative effects of road and forest edge and or a positive effect of river proximity on densities The population size may be 47 000 individuals in the Ankarafantsika National Park 9 However the species is frequently seen around villages and in areas dominated by introduced tree species 7 Diet editCoquerel s sifaka s herbivorous diet varies by season In the wet season it eats immature leaves flowers fruit bark and dead wood In the dry season it eats mature leaves and buds 10 It may browse nearly 100 plant species but the majority of its feeding time is concentrated on about 10 of these 11 Since it has a very fibrous diet Coquerel s sifaka has an enlarged cecum and extremely long colon that helps facilitate digestion 12 These lemurs spend 30 40 of their day foraging especially in the morning midday and evening Females often take leadership roles during foraging and exert their dominance by eating the preferred food or denying the males food until they are satisfied These lemurs are beneficial to the environment because they aid seed dispersion Captive Coquerel s sifakas eat shining leaf sumac and mimosa 13 Behaviour editCoquerel s sifaka lives in matriarchal groups of about three to ten individuals 7 nbsp Clinging to tree trunkIt is diurnal and primarily arboreal Much is known about its behavior from observations in the wild and in captivity 12 Social structure edit Coquerel s sifakas spend the majority of their time in areas of just 2 3 ha 4 9 7 4 acres However they can live in areas with 4 8 ha 9 9 19 8 acres Though their home range may overlap with other groups of sifakas they avoid each other to avoid aggression 14 When friendly Coquerel s sifakas meet they greet by rubbing their noses together Matriarchy is rare in the animal kingdom as a whole but common among lemurs A matriarchal system is particularly pronounced in Coquerel s sifaka All adult and even most subadult females are dominant over males 12 Females have preferential access to food and other resources When a female is browsing an area or tree a male waits for her to finish before he moves there to feed If he gets in the way of the female she may lunge smack or bite him The male then exhibits submissive behavior by rolling his tail between his legs chattering softly and baring his teeth in a grimace before quickly leaping out of her way 12 When mating Coquerel s sifaka commonly practices polyandry A female may choose to mate with only one male but most often she mates with several from other visiting groups as well as from her own Males compete for access to sexually receptive females However the winner of a fight will not necessarily be the one she selects for breeding The criteria by which she chooses a mate are evidently more complex 6 In some other animals polyandrous mating is thought to raise the chances of successful fertilization but this does not appear to be the case in Coquerel s sifaka Instead polyandry is thought to be advantageous because when paternity is confused the likelihood of male infanticide decreases 11 Reproduction edit Female Coquerel s sifakas choose their mate s whether from intragroup males or males from outside groups 15 They have synchronized estrus in January and February 12 Infants are born in June and July after a gestation period around 162 days Normally one infant is born during Madagascar s dry season June July Newborn lemurs have an average weight of 100 g 3 5 oz though it can vary between 85 and 115 g 3 0 and 4 1 oz An infant clings to its mother s chest until about a month or so after birth then transfers to her back Infants are weaned and become fully independent around six months of age Adult size is reached at one to five years 10 Males and females become sexually mature around two to three and a half years old though some do not have their first offspring until they are six Hybrids have been known to occur with some species One is P verreauxi 16 Locomotion edit nbsp Coquerel s sifaka in the wild at Anjajavy Forest nbsp The terrestrial locomotion of Coquerel s sifakaIn the trees Coquerel s sifaka moves by vertical clinging and leaping It maintains an upright posture when at rest or when propelling itself between branches or trunks This style of arboreal locomotion is characteristic of most if not all lemurs 12 This particular lemur can leap from tree to tree up to 35 feet 11 m 17 It has the extraordinary ability to leap to spiny trees and precisely place its hands and feet so that it will not hurt itself Occasionally Coquerel s sifaka descends to the ground to cross open spaces Its terrestrial locomotion is unique to its species Like Verreaux s sifaka it moves in a series of bipedal hops with its arms thrown out to the sides for balance However whereas Verreaux s sifaka bounds sideways and crosses its legs one in front of the other the Coquerel s sifaka bounds forward like a kangaroo It leans in the direction of its jump to achieve forward momentum 10 A study at Duke University s Primate Center examined feeding behaviors of captive sifakas to determine their handedness Given chopped fruits and vegetables adult male and female sifakas showed a predominant preference for left handedness while younger sifakas alternated hands to grab food Coquerel s sifakas gain dexterity and hand preference with age diverging only slightly by gender 18 Communication edit Coquerel s sifaka uses a variety of auditory visual and olfactory signals to communicate 19 Sifaka is a Malagasy name that comes from the lemurs characteristic shif auk sound 20 The first syllable is a low growl that bubbles in the throat and the second is a clicking sound like an amplified hiccup The shih fak call is used to warn fellow group members of a potential ground predator or to threaten enemies and intruders Coquerel s sifaka is highly territorial 21 Contact calls used when groups are traveling include soft grunts and growls If a sifaka is separated from its group members it may emit a long loud wail to find them 11 One visual signal which Coquerel s sifaka uses to communicate is a rapid backward jerking of the head This is a threatening action that may accompany the shih fak call 10 Sifakas also rely heavily on scent for communication Males typically scent mark using a gland in their throats which they will rub back and forth along branches Females are more likely to scent mark with anogenital glands It is not entirely clear what information is conveyed in these scents beyond the demarcation of territory 11 A study of sifaka vocalizations found that roaring barks are associated with anti raptor responses in which the Coquerel s sifakas looked up and climbed down 22 The tchi fak vocalizations was associated with anti terrestrial responses in which the sifakas looked down and climbed up 22 And the meaning of growls seemed to vary by population where a population subject to significant raptor predation associated the growls with anti raptor responses but another population associated growls with mild disturbance 22 Economic importance editCoquerel s sifakas like many lemurs have been studied to help scientists learn about the evolutionary history of primates including humans They have been the subject of those researching evolution of color vision paternal care matriarchal primate societies and causes of speciation 12 Conservation status and threats editThough its populations are thought to be widely distributed Coquerel s sifaka is found in only two protected areas in Madagascar the Ankarafantsika National Park and the Bora Special Reserve It is a critically endangered species according to the IUCN s Red List of Threatened Species and it is listed in CITES Appendix I 2 The principal threats to its existence are deforestation habitat fragmentation and hunting pressure The local people often clear trees to produce new farming land especially in the marshes where rice can be grown In northwestern Madagascar deforestation results from annual burning to create new pastureland for livestock Trees are also cut for the production of charcoal 14 Many local Malagasy traditions prohibit hunting of Coquerel s sifaka One such taboo derives from a legend of a sifaka saving the life of a boy who has fallen out of a tree The story goes like this A little boy heads into the forest to find some honey He spots a hive in a high tree and he ascends it As he is about to reach in to collect the honey he is immediately attacked by bees The surprise causes the boy to lose his grip on the tree branch and he falls to what is almost certainly his death As the boy plummets toward the earth a large lemur suddenly appears swoops in and catches the boy saving his life Ever since that day lemurs became sacred to the Malagasy and it is said that anyone who kills one shall have extreme misfortune 23 These protective taboos are breaking down with cultural erosion and immigration 14 This lemur is now hunted for bushmeat but humans are not the only threat The introduction of foreign species especially cats and dogs has hurt the Coquerel s sifaka Projects for Animal Welfare encourages the neutering and spaying of the cats and dogs on the island to protect the native wildlife 1 Even the protected areas where the Coquerel s sifaka occurs offer it little protection It is hunted even within Ankarafantsika and the Bora Special Reserve has become seriously degraded 10 Predation edit Many animals prey on Coquerel s sifakas Hawks and other raptors attack them from above while constrictor snakes and the fossa threaten them from the ground Introduced predators such as feral dogs African cats European cats mongooses and civets also prey on them However of all these creatures humans are the biggest hazard Though killing the lemurs was taboo 12 Coquerel s sifaka see humans now as a threat and may give out an alarm call to warn the others 12 Some lemurs are unaware of the danger humans pose and will approach humans on the ground To intimidate predators they do recognize the lemurs announce the threat with a warning call and stare at the threat shaking their heads back and forth 24 Cultural references editThe titular lemur on the PBS Kids television program Zoboomafoo is portrayed by a Coquerel s sifaka 12 named Jovian Jovian lived at the Duke Lemur Center where the show was originally filmed until he died from kidney failure at the age of 20 on November 10 2014 25 His son Charlemagne known as Charlie lives at the center with his family group of other Coquerel s sifakas 26 References edit a b c Louis E E Bailey C A Sefczek T M King T Radespiel U Frasier C L 2020 Propithecus coquereli IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T18355A115572275 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 2 RLTS T18355A115572275 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 a b Checklist of CITES Species CITES UNEP WCMC Retrieved 18 March 2015 Groves C P 2005 Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press p 120 ISBN 0 801 88221 4 OCLC 62265494 Kappeler P M 1991 Patterns of sexual dimorphism in body weight among prosimian primates Folia Primatologica 57 3 132 146 doi 10 1159 000156575 PMID 1794769 Tattersall I 1982 The Primates of Madagascar Columbia University a b Pochron S T Wright P C 2005 Dance of the sexes a lemur needs some unusual traits to survive in Madagascar s unpredictable environment CBS Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 12 March 2012 a b c d e f Salmona Jordi 2014 Extensive survey of the Endangered Coquerel s sifaka Propithecus coquereli Endangered Species Research 25 2 175 183 doi 10 3354 esr00622 hdl 10400 7 348 Petter J J 1962 Recherches sur l ecologie et l ethologie des lemuriens malgaches Memoires du Museum National d Histoire Naturelle Serie A Zoologie 27 1 146 a b Kun Rodrigues C Salmona J Besolo A Rasolondraibe E Rabarivola C Marques TA Chikhi L 2014 New density estimates of a threatened sifaka species Propithecus coquereli in Ankarafantsika National Park American Journal of Primatology 76 6 515 528 doi 10 1002 ajp 22243 hdl 10400 7 558 PMID 24443250 S2CID 11185235 Retrieved 18 Feb 2015 a b c d e Mittermeier R A Konstant W R Hawkins F Louis E E et al 2006 Lemurs of Madagascar Illustrated by S D Nash 2nd ed Conservation International ISBN 1 881173 88 7 OCLC 883321520 a b c d Richard Alison 2003 Propithecus Sifakas In Steven M Goodman Jonathan P Benstead eds The Natural History of Madagascar Chicago University of Chicago pp 1345 1348 ISBN 0 226 30306 3 a b c d e f g h i j Oldenkamp R 2011 Propithecus coquereli Animal Diversity Web Retrieved 18 March 2012 Campbell J Glenn K Grossi B Eisemann J 2001 Use of Local North Carolina Browse Species to Supplement the Diet of a Captive Colony of Folivorous Primates Propithecus sp Zoo Biology 20 6 447 461 doi 10 1002 zoo 10007 a b c Garbutt N 2007 Mammals of Madagascar A Complete Guide A amp C Black Publishers Ltd Kubzdela K Richard A Pereira M 1992 Social Relations in Semi Free Ranging Sifakas Propithecus verreauxi coquereli and the Question of Female Dominance American Journal of Primatology 28 2 139 145 doi 10 1002 ajp 1350280206 PMID 31941220 S2CID 84398797 Taylor L 2008 Old Lemurs Preliminary Data on Behavior and Reproduction from the Duke University Primate Center pp 319 333 in J Fleagle C Gilbert eds Elwyn Simons A Search for Origins New York Springer Science Business Media LLC Iverson Erik 26 July 2012 Coquerel s Sifaka Archived 2012 07 12 at the Wayback Machine Mongabay Mason Angela Wolfe Linda Johnson Jeffrey 1995 Hand Preference in the Sifaka Propithecus verreauxi coquereli During Feeding in Captivity Primates 36 2 275 280 doi 10 1007 BF02381353 S2CID 21949388 Greive Bradley Trevor Priceless The Vanishing Beauty of a Fragile Planet Kansas City MO Andrews McMeel Pub 2003 Print Richard A 1978 Behavioral Variation Case Study of a Malagasy Lemur Cranbury New Jersey Associated University Presses Inc Jolly Alison 2004 Lords and Lemurs Mad Scientists Kings with Spears and the Survival of Diversity in Madagascar Boston Houghton Mifflin Archived from the original on 2005 03 04 a b c Fichtel Claudia Kappeler Peter M 2011 Variation in the Meaning of Alarm Calls in Verreaux s and Coquerel s Sifakas Propithecus verreauxi P coquereli International Journal of Primatology 32 2 346 361 doi 10 1007 s10764 010 9472 9 PMC 3047677 PMID 21475394 Smith Dave 29 December 2011 Lemurs Killed Eaten More in Madagascar as Taboos Fade Archived 2012 02 03 at the Wayback Machine International Business Times Fichtel C van Schaik C P 2006 Semantic Differences in Sifaka Propithecus verreauxi Alarm Calls A Reflection of Genetic or Cultural Variants Ethology 112 9 839 849 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0310 2006 01239 x Jovian Archived 2014 11 14 at the Wayback Machine Duke Lemur Center Duke Lemur Center 2011 Coquerel s Sifaka External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Propithecus coquereli Video of Unique Sifaka Movement Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coquerel 27s sifaka amp oldid 1193840811, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.