1. The influence of seasonality, anthropogenic disturbances, and cyclonic activity on the behavior of northern sportive lemurs (Lepilemur septentrionalis) at Montagne des Français, Madagascar
- Author
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Mary P Dinsmore, Karen B. Strier, and Edward E. Louis
- Subjects
biology ,Cyclonic Storms ,Ecology ,Anthropogenic Effects ,Lemur ,Seasonality ,Generalist and specialist species ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Northern sportive lemur ,Diet ,Strepsirhini ,Geography ,Habitat ,biology.animal ,Dry season ,Madagascar ,medicine ,Animals ,Cyclone ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Tropical cyclone ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Anthropogenic tropical deforestation and degradation imminently threaten primates today. Primates living in these disturbed habitats may also be subjected to increasingly severe tropical storms such as cyclones or hurricanes. These disturbances pose an immediate risk to their livelihood and can dramatically alter their habitats, in turn potentially shifting behavioral patterns. We had the unique opportunity to study the effects of seasonality, anthropogenic disturbances, and the immediate effects of a cyclone on the behavior of the critically endangered northern sportive lemur (NSL) in an anthropogenically disturbed forest in Madagascar. Cyclone Enawo made landfall on March 7, 2017 in northeast Madagascar with sustained wind speeds of 230 km/h. We collected behavioral data on nine individual NSLs during both wet and dry seasons, before and after Cyclone Enawo, and in areas of differing human activity, using scan sampling at 5-min intervals. We ran generalized linear mixed models to test the effects of seasonality and disturbances on behavior. We found that NSLs spent more time feeding in dry months compared with wet (Z = -4.21, p
- Published
- 2021