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Results tagged “lemurs” from NatGeo News Watch

A 37-million-year-old fossil primate from Egypt, described in this week's issue of Nature, moves a controversial German fossil known as Ida out of the human lineage, Nature News reports.

"Teeth and ankle bones of the new Egyptian specimen show that the 47-million-year-old Ida, formally called Darwinius masillae, is not in the lineage of early apes and monkeys (haplorhines), but instead belongs to ancestors (adapiforms) of today's lemurs and lorises," Nature News said.

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Artist's reconstruction of the lower jaw of a 37 million-year-old Egyptian primate, Afradapis. The fossil primate Darwinius (popularly known as Ida) and Afradapis, the new find, are not related to humans, researchers say.

Illustration courtesy of: Zina Deretsky, National Science Foundation

The National Science Foundation, which supported the new research, said paleontologists from three American universities "are revealing features of a newly discovered African primate and solving a riddle about humankind's evolutionary past." 

Lead researcher Erik Seiffert of New York's Stony Brook University and his colleagues say their find has the potential to clear up a portion of the human evolutionary tree by resolving the location of a misplaced species, NSF said in a statement.

"The recently described fossil Darwinius, originally recovered from a disused quarry near Messel, Germany in the 1980s, has been widely publicized as an important 'link' in the lineage to higher primates," said Seiffert.

He and his research team recently discovered a lemur-like relative of Darwinius in about 40 miles outside Cairo, Egypt. They named it Afradapis and analyzed its place in primate evolution.

"Our study results indicate that Darwinius and its now extinct relatives, including Afradapis, are not in the evolutionary lineage leading to monkeys, apes, and humans as has been debated," he said. "Instead they are more closely related to the living lemurs and lorises."

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Using a method called parsimony analysis to reconstruct the most likely family tree of living and extinct primates, taking into consideration virtually all of the available anatomical evidence that can be observed, palentologists determined that Darwinius and its now extinct relatives, including Afradapis, are not on the evolutionary lineage leading to Old World monkey's, apes and humans, but instead are more closely related to the living lemurs and lorises.

Illustration courtesy of Erik Seiffert, Stony Brook University

Seiffert's team, which includes Jonathan M. G. Perry of Midwestern University, Ill; Elwyn L. Simons of Duke University, N.C. and Doug M. Boyer also of Stony Brook, base their findings on analysis of Afradapis fossils collected from an excavation site modestly called BQ-2 near the Fayum Depression in northern Egypt.

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Paleontologists searched an area near the Fayum Depression in northern Egypt about 40 miles outside Cairo for clues to the primate evolution tree.

Photo courtesy of Erik Seiffert, Stony Brook University

They first discovered a poorly preserved Afradapis fossil, a fragment that showed features of the front teeth and jaw bone that were almost identical to those of later Old World monkeys, NSF said. "But it didn't make sense to the researchers that a member of that primate lineage would have been present in Africa at such an early time period, about 37 million years ago.

"Soon they recovered additional Afradapis fossils and through dental analysis eventually clarified that Afradapis and Darwinius weren't in the line of Old World monkeys, apes and humans, but had concurrently evolved similar features with their distant relative, a type of anthropoid."

"The similar features evolved through the process of convergent evolution," Seiffert explained. "This means that under similar selection pressures, both lineages came to have similar specializations, but these features were not present in their last common ancestor."

Noted shared specializations from dental examinations include fusion of the two halves of the jaw, reduction and loss of the first few premolar teeth, and the presence of front incisors that are each shaped like a spatula, rather than being shaped more like a cone.

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Students of the early primate fossil record generally hold two views about the evolution of an extinct group of lemur-like primates called adapiforms, NSF said in a statement. "A majority of students consider adapiforms to be ancient relatives of a primate suborder that includes lemurs and lorises. A minority view is that adapiforms are more closely related to monkeys and apes.

"The latter hypothesis hinges on features such as fusion of the two halves of the jaw, reduction and loss of the first few premolar teeth, and the presence of incisors. Researchers say their studies of the jaw and teeth of the adapiform Afradapis shows that adapiforms and the distant relatives of monkeys and apes independently evolved similar features."

Photo courtesy of Erik Seiffert, Stony Brook University

Interestingly, the ancestors of Old World monkeys, apes, and humans developed these features millions of years later, long after Afradapis and Darwinius were extinct, NSF said. "But, reconstructing the most likely family tree of both living and extinct primates, taking into consideration virtually all available anatomical evidence, the paleontologists determined that Darwinius, and its relative Afradapis, are not in the direct evolutionary line with humans."

"Our discoveries certainly contribute to a growing body of evidence that indicates that convergent evolution was a common phenomenon in early primate evolution," Seiffert said.

The finding is reported in the October 20 issue of the journal Nature. NSF supports the research through its social, behavioral and economic sciences directorate's physical anthropology program.

Madagascar's efforts to curtail illegal logging in the World Heritage Sites of Masoala and Marojejy National Parks and their peripheral zones have not reduced the impact of logging in the immediate term, say governments, international agencies, and conservation groups that support conservation of the country's natural heritage.

A statement issued today by 13 embassies, agencies, and organizations--the 'International Community and Conservation Partners Resident in Madagascar"--calls for "aggressive transparent actions to curb illegal logging in and around Madagascar's Protected Areas and World Heritage Sites."

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NGS photo of lemur in Madagascar forest by Luis Marden

The "communique" was made two months after eleven groups that fund and help manage conservation of Madagascar's remaining wilderness heritage issued a joint statement, deploring the invasion by armed looters of national parks and forests, illegal timber extraction, illegal mining, and intensified smuggling of endangered species.

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The groups came together at the end of March after numerous reports that Madagascar's conservation areas were being plundered by bandits and organized criminal syndicates taking advantage of the lawlessness and paralysis of government in the wake of a coup d'etat and ongoing political turmoil throughout the African island country.

Earlier in March, the Marojejy National Park in the northern region of Madgascar closed for tourism after gangs entered the sanctuary to cut down precious rosewood trees.

Looters invading Madagascar's protected wildlife sanctuaries to harvest trees threaten critically endangered lemurs and other species, conservationists warn. (Read a full account about this.)

Satellite image courtesy NASA

Now, two months later, there is no indication that the illegal logging has abated, prompting today's statement.

Joining the conservation groups in today's statement are the embassies of France, Germany, Japan, Norway, Switzerland, and the U.S. All these countries provide foreign assistance to Madagascar.

"Madagascar's image ... is being irreparably damaged."

The statement said: "We are troubled that Madagascar's image, nationally and internationally, as a country committed to the protection of its unique biodiversity and natural resources, is being irreparably damaged, resulting in reduced long-term support to protected areas and making it difficult for Madagascar's people to benefit from its natural resource heritage.

"We are also afraid this damage could spread around other protected areas and their peripheral zone.

"The increased illegal logging calls into question Madagascar's genuine commitment to a transparent wood control system that documents the legality of harvesting and sales. A significant amount of precious resources--hardwood, unique biodiversity and non-collected fees--are irreversibly lost from this uncontrolled timber harvesting.

"The Malagasy rural people only marginally benefit from this illegal trade of precious wood, as the international value of the exported wood is over 600 times the benefits to the collector. It is clear the current situation does not further the fight against poverty or the livelihoods of Madagascar's rural population."

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NGS photo by Luis Marden

Illegal trade of timber is growing in importance and concern at the global level, the statement continued. "The United States and European Union are putting in place new strict laws and regulations to stop the importation of illegally harvested and traded wood products.

"We, the international community and conservation partners, encourage a still more proactive and aggressive response in addressing this increased harvesting of Madagascar's unique natural resources by implementing a legal transparent system of wood trade that effectively controls all points in the supply chain.

"Environmental governance can and must be improved through preventive actions at all levels, including pressure on international buyers coupled with incentives that support legal trade and respond to the needs and engagement of local communities.

"Moreover, it is essential that the Malagasy authorities, with the support of all stakeholders, improve support to protected areas in order to preserve the extraordinary biological riches of Madagascar."

Read the full text:

► Read This Entire Post
Updated with new images and text 

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Photo of silky sifakas in Marojejy National Park by Jeff Gibbs/courtesy Erik Patel

Looters are invading Madagascar's protected wildlife sanctuaries, harvesting trees and threatening critically endangered lemurs and other species, conservationists said today.

Marojejy National Park in the northern part of the African island country has been closed to tourism. Rangers are abandoning their posts in other parks, according to reports.

Madagascar-map.jpgThe trouble is linked to turmoil that culminated in a coup d'etat that ousted President Marc Ravalomanana last week. Looters have taken advantage of government paralysis and lawlessness in some parts of the country. Some protected conservation areas are being invaded by organized criminals intent on cutting down valuable rosewood trees and extracting other protected resources, according to conservationists in Madagascar.

The closure of Marojejy National Park was "deemed necessary by park management due to the lawlessness that has descended over the ... region during this time of political unrest in Madagascar, and the resultant looting and destruction which is currently occurring within the park," according to a notice posted on the park's Web site.

Satellite image courtesy NASA

"In particular, gangs of armed men (led primarily by foreign profiteers in conjunction with the rich local mafia) are plundering the rainforests of Marojejy for the extremely valuable rosewood that grows there," the notice continues.

The crisis in Marojejy has serious implications on several fronts, states the notice on the park's Web site.

madagascar-map-2.jpg"First, of course, is the extremely detrimental impact it is having on the park's unique flora and fauna. While old-growth rosewood trees may be the primary objective of the armed gangs, such destructive, unregulated use of the forest will certainly have an adverse effect on everything else in the park.

"Most worrisome is the well-being of the highly endangered silky sifaka, a lemur found only in the rainforests of Marojejy and the surrounding area."

Map courtesy Marojejy National Park

"But the crisis is also having a devastating effect outside the boundaries of the park itself. With armed militia descending on local villages and death threats being issued, people live in fear; communities are divided, and families are pitted one against the other. Many local people who depend on tourism -- guides, porters, shopkeepers, hotel and restaurant personnel - -now live in limbo.

Marojejy-Facts.jpg"With no other means of support, some turn to the lucrative rosewood trade," the notice said.

Erik Patel is a PhD candidate at Cornell University who has been studying the silky sifaka since 2001 and has recently published the first article about illegal precious wood logging in Madagascar. (See a quote from his paper in the side bar below.)

"Illegal logging of precious wood has emerged as one of the most severe threats to Madagascar's dwindling northeastern
rainforests," Patel said in an email.

 


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Rosewood logged illegally in Marojejy National Park in 2005

Photo courtesy Erik Patel

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Cornell University PhD Candidate Erik Patel has been studying the silky sifaka since 2001.

Photo of silky sifaka by Andrew Ritchie. Photo of Patel by Abigail Derby/courtesy Erik Patel


The video clip above features Erik Patel and his work in Marojejy National Park. It is from "Angels of the Forest, " a documentary film by Sharon Pieczenik chronicling the science and conservation efforts surrounding the silky sifaka.

Over the past few years, thousands of logs, worth millions of dollars, have been confiscated at ports of Vohémar, Antalaha, and Toamasina, Patel said. "Most of this critically endangered rosewood and ebony is known to have come from Marojejy National Park and Masoala National Park." 

Marojejy-Facts-1a.jpgIn the face of rich, armed, and politically connected criminals (believed to have ties to elements in China), the parks simply lack the resources to stop this, he added.

"The impacts of such selective logging include violating local taboos as well as ecological consequences such as increased likehood of fire, invasive species, impaired habitat, and loss in genetic diversity." 

Patel said that a key cause of the logging now being seen was the recent (January, 2009) termination of the law prohibiting export of rosewood and ebony from Madagascar. 

The laws prohibiting such exportation must be reinstated as soon as possible," he said. "It is unprecedented for a national park in Madagacar to be closed to tourism because of illegal logging!"

Patricia Wright and Mireya Mayor, conservationists who have done extensive research on lemurs in the wild, spoke to me at length about the crisis in Madagascar. Both had heard from their contacts in Madagascar that rangers were abandoning their posts in a number of parks because of concerns about personal safety.

"I'm gutted and at a loss to describe how bad this situation is," said Mayor, a primatologist and National Geographic Emerging Explorer who has done field work in Marojejy. (Watch the video about her work below.) "Thirty years of successful conservation initiatives is now at risk of being totally destroyed," she said in the interview.

Mireya Mayor working with both the silky sifaka in Marojejy and Perrier's sifaka in Analamera.

National Geographic Video

Loggers who invaded the parks to extract rosewood would destroy habitat, set up camps, and eat the wildlife, including the lemurs, Mayor predicted. "The lemurs will not be able to withstand this."

"This crisis has had a compelling effect on me personally because of the immediate threat to Perrier's sifaka and the silky sifaka," Mayor said.

silky-sifaka-picture-2.jpg Mayor did groundbreaking research on these two critically endangered primates, leading the first expeditions to capture, collar and study some of the animals in remote areas of Madagascar a decade ago. Her work was showcased on National Geographic Television. The work was used to elevate the silky sifaka and Perrier's sifaka from subspecies of lemur to full species. "I feel personally vested in this 'war,'" she said. 

"I have worked extensively in the northern forests and with those villagers whose kindness and generosity got me through many an expedition and whose lives are now being threatened. I am anxious about them too," Mayor said. 

Photo of silky sifakas by Jeff Gibbs/courtesy Erik Patel

 

Posts Abandoned

Patricia Wright said she had received reports that rangers were abandoning their posts in a number of other parks because of fears for their safety.

"What's happening in the north is very worrying, because that is the home of two of the most endangered primates in the world, the silky sifaka and the Perrier's sifaka," she said.

Wright, a professor in the Department of Anthropology at the State University of New York at Stony Brook and former member of National Geographic's Committee for Research and Exploration, said she had been on the phone to her contacts in the region yesterday and was told that heavy rain had been falling in the far north of the country for days, making the roads nearly impassable. That could be a good thing because it could inhibit timber exploitation, she said.

The trouble appeared to be confined for the moment to parks in Madagascar's northern areas, Wright said. However, she was concerned that it could spread if the country's political situation was not quickly resolved.

Both Wright and Mayor were at a loss about what could be done to alleviate the crisis in the short term. "One thing we can do is create awareness about this," Mayor said.

pat-wright-and-mireya-mayor-picture.jpgWright said she was trying to contact foundations and agencies that sponsor conservation in Madagascar. "A big worry is that funding dries up for conservation because of the coup. That will leave the national parks without resources and completely exposed to exploitation."

Both Mayor and Wright are also concerned about the long-term future of conservation in Madagascar.

Patricia Wright (left) and Mireya Mayor photo courtesy Mireya Mayor

Former President Ravalomanana had committed the Madagascar government to increasing protected areas on the island and had demonstrated a willingness to work with conservationists. "Now, we don't know what's going to happen," Mayor said.

Erik Patel sent the photos below -- "three of our best Marojejy National park landscape photos" -- which I am adding to show readers the majestic beauty of the habitat, closed temporarily to tourism.

Below the photos are links for additional information and related National Geographic News stories about Marojejy, lemurs, Madagascar, and more. 

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The three photos above are by Inaki Relanzon/courtesy Erik Patel

Additional Information:

Marojejy in Crisis (Marojejy National Park Web site)

"Cross Dressing" Lemurs Appear Male to Avoid Conflict (National Geographic News)

Flying Lemurs With "Backpacks" Reveal Gliding Secrets (National Geographic News)

Photo: Three New Lemurs Discovered, Add to Madagascar's Diversity (National Geographic News)

Threatened Lemurs' Diet Key to Conservation Efforts, Researchers Say (National Geographic News)

Lemur Logic May Provide Clues to Primate Intellect Evolution (National Geographic News)

Rainfall Helps Baby Lemurs Survive, Tooth Study Shows (National Geographic News)

African Trees May Be Tied to Lemurs' Fate (National Geographic News)

Madagascar Creates Millions of Acres of New Protected Areas (National Geographic News)

Rare Animals Make Africa Island Park True Hot Spot (National Geographic News)

TV News Feature: Madagascar Ecotourism (National Geographic News)

Monkeys and Lemurs Videos (National Geographic)

Map of Madagascar (National Geographic)

 

Related News From the Web

A happy ending for Madagascar? (BBC Earth Watch blog)

Conservationists see trouble in Madagascar conflict (Nature's Great Beyond blog)

Madagascar Scientists Struggle With Military Coup (ScienceInsider blog)

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