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      Long-Term Field Studies of Primates 

      A 15-Year Perspective on the Social Organization and Life History of Sifaka in Kirindy Forest

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      Springer Berlin Heidelberg

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          Anti-predator behavior of group-living Malagasy primates: mixed evidence for a referential alarm call system

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            Development and application of a phylogenomic toolkit: resolving the evolutionary history of Madagascar's lemurs.

            Lemurs and the other strepsirrhine primates are of great interest to the primate genomics community due to their phylogenetic placement as the sister lineage to all other primates. Previous attempts to resolve the phylogeny of lemurs employed limited mitochondrial or small nuclear data sets, with many relationships poorly supported or entirely unresolved. We used genomic resources to develop 11 novel markers from nine chromosomes, representing approximately 9 kb of nuclear sequence data. In combination with previously published nuclear and mitochondrial loci, this yields a data set of more than 16 kb and adds approximately 275 kb of DNA sequence to current databases. Our phylogenetic analyses confirm hypotheses of lemuriform monophyly and provide robust resolution of the phylogenetic relationships among the five lemuriform families. We verify that the genus Daubentonia is the sister lineage to all other lemurs. The Cheirogaleidae and Lepilemuridae are sister taxa and together form the sister lineage to the Indriidae; this clade is the sister lineage to the Lemuridae. Divergence time estimates indicate that lemurs are an ancient group, with their initial diversification occurring around the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary. Given the power of this data set to resolve branches in a notoriously problematic area of primate phylogeny, we anticipate that our phylogenomic toolkit will be of value to other studies of primate phylogeny and diversification. Moreover, the methods applied will be broadly applicable to other taxonomic groups where phylogenetic relationships have been notoriously difficult to resolve.
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              Low-Level Forest Disturbance Effects on Primary Production, Leaf Chemistry, and Lemur Populations

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                2012
                November 14 2011
                : 101-121
                10.1007/978-3-642-22514-7_5
                4c88d89f-8cb9-4b5b-bd1e-59d2c5383008
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