Please join us on Friday, June 8th for a special photography tour with our own, David Haring. This tour will be from 9-11am and is $150 per person, ages 12 and above. Please call 919-401-7240 to book this experience. Only 6 spaces are available. .

Diademed Sifaka

Conservation Film Award!

  A recently released conservation oriented film by the BBC, which features DLC’s own Dr. Erik Patel, has just won accolades at the International Wildlife Film Festival in Missoula, Montana! http://wildlifefilms.wordpress.com/  In addition to Erik’s research on silky sifakas, “Madagascar, Lemurs, and Spies” also features undercover work by Sascha Von Bismarck of the Environmental Investigation...

Read More »

The DLC says a sad goodbye to Romeo

“With great sadness, I write to announce an event that I have dreaded for many months now.  Our beloved Romeo, the western hemisphere’s only diademed sifaka to be successfully housed in captivity, died this morning of natural causes after a prolonged illness.  Death at the Duke Lemur Center is a rare event, and each one is felt...

Read More »

“With great sadness, I write to announce an event that I have dreaded for many months now.  Our beloved Romeo, the western hemisphere’s only diademed sifaka to be successfully housed in captivity, died this morning of natural causes after a prolonged illness.  Death at the Duke Lemur Center is a rare event, and each one is felt as a grievous loss, but in Romeo’s case, the grief is profound.

Romeo was an exquisitely beautiful creature, and was gentle and responsive to his caretakers.  To see him was to be enchanted by him, and for those who cared for him day in and day out, he was a vivid presence.  He was also a symbol of hope and optimism.  He was a survivor who beat the odds, and was a source of special pride to all of the DLC staff.  He first came to the DLC from Madagascar in 1993, along with his mother and an adult male. Sadly, both adults in Romeo’s group died soon after leaving their native Madagascar.  All lemurs are fragile creatures, but sifakas are especially vulnerable.  They are devoted leaf eaters, and as such, have an extremely sensitive digestive system.  Romeo, perhaps because he was still nursing from his mother, adapted to his new environment, and survived.  He went on to live to be 19 years old, an age far beyond what could be hoped for in the wild.  His long and rich life is a testament to the remarkable care that he received from the DLC staff over the years.  

 

We will miss our beautiful boy.”

-Dr. Anne Yoder

DLC Director

-->

Overview

The eastern species of sifaka, Propithecus diadema, has four distinctly colored subspecies, each with a distinct range. In addition to the diademed sifaka (Propithecus diadema diadema) the other three subspecies include Milne-Edward’s sifaka (Propithecus diadema edwardsi), the Silky sifaka (Propithecus diadema candidus), and Perrier’s sifaka (Propithecus diadema perrieri). Together with the Indri (Indri indri), with...

Read More »

Feeding

The diademed sifaka diet consists primarily of leaves, flowers and fruits, the proportion of each varying with the season. Studies of this sifaka have reported that it may feed on over 25 different plant species daily. Generally, the diademed sifaka will forage in the upper part of the canopy, but the animals occasionally descend to...

Read More »

Fact Sheet

Order: Primates; Suborder: Prosimii Family: Indriidae; Genus: Propithecus Species: diadema; Subspecies : diadema Related Species The Sifaka of Madagascar are distinguished from other lemurs by their mode of locomotion: these animals maintain a distinctly vertical posture and leap through the trees using just the strength of their back legs. They are all relatively large bodied,...

Read More »

Reproduction

A female will give birth to a single offspring which initially will cling to her belly, but which gradually transfers to her back. At the age of two to three months, the infants may begin to venture off on short independent forays away from the mother. Infants off by themselves as well as independent juveniles...

Read More »

Social Behavior

The diademed sifaka is active during the day, like all the sifakas, but unlike crepuscular Eulemur  species, these sifakas will ascend into a sleep tree for the night as early as a full hour before sunset. They live in multi-male/multi-female groups numbering from four to eight animals. Females live in one group their entire lives,...

Read More »

Habitat/Conservation

P. diadema diadema is restricted to the rainforests of eastern and northeastern Madagascar. Its precise range is unknown, but it probably has the highest numbers and greatest range of any of the four subspecies of diademed sifaka. It is believed to range from the Mangoro River in the South to the Antainambalana River in the...

Read More »

Gallery

...

Read More »

North Carolina Wordpress Web Design and Hosting by ConnectNC, Inc.