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Happy Birthday to Deborah, the Grande Dame of the Lemur Center

May 18, 2014 – The Duke Lemur Center houses over 250 animals, but every individual is special. “Silver Lemurs” is a series profiling some of the Duke Lemur Center’s senior residents.The larger bodied lemurs — such as the ruffed lemurs, the sifakas and the aye-ayes — can live to be well into their 30s. Even […]

Winter 2014 DLC Newsletter

Click here for the latest DLC newsletter:  LEMUR_NEWSLETTER_FEB2014 (2)

Why being a tour guide is more fun than you might think

We asked volunteer and Duke undergrad Faye Goodwin what she loves about leading tours at the Duke Lemur Center. Find out why she leaves her busy campus life twice a week to be a tour guide — sometimes on Sunday mornings when most of her classmates are sleeping in — and what she learns from […]

Lemur research could provide insight on human sleep patterns

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The secret (night)life of lemurs

A team of researchers aims to find out what lemurs do all night while the rest of us are snoozing. In today’s post, Lemur Center volunteer and student researcher Joel Bray reports on what happens at the Center after the sun goes down, and what his team hopes to learn about the secrets of sleep: […]

Capacity Building

Through training and partnership, promote the ability of Malagasy nationals to wisely manage their country’s environmental resources Fish farms provide alternative protein and income Lemurs as protein source – bushmeat for subsistence – has continued to grow in northeast Madagascar in the wake of political instability and breakdown of traditional hunting taboos (Patel Sep 2012 […]

Oh yeah? Smell this! or, Conflict resolution, lemur-style

Like most animals, lemurs compete with each other for scarce resources such as territory, food and reproductive mates. While sometimes this type of squabble is resolved by fighting, sharp teeth and claws can result in serious injuries to one or both participants. Ringtail lemurs live in large social groups of 20 – 30 individuals in […]

Mouse Lemur Monologue

Hello.  My name is Anne, and I am addicted to mouse lemurs —- or perhaps I should say, to studying mouse lemurs, or maybe more specifically, to the genes of mouse lemurs. It all started back in the late 1990′s when I began a collaboration with my friend and colleague, Steve Goodman (Madagascar Field Biologist Extraordinaire).  Steve wrote to […]