Home
 About Madagascar
  Maps
  FAQs
  People
  History
  Environment
 Flora
 Wildlife
  Birds
  Fish
  Frogs
  Invertebrates
  Lemurs
  Mammals
  Reptiles
 Places
  Antananarivo
 Conservation
  ANGAP
  Parks
  Guides
  News
 Photos
 Educational
 Media resources
 Madagascar News
 Store
 Madagascar Travel
 About the site
 How to help
 Books
 Links
 Contact




Phaner furcifer - Masoala Fork-crowned Lemur

NOTES:

LOCAL NAMES: Tanta, Tantaraolana Web links for Phaner furcifer :

ADW: Phaner furcifer: Information -- Phaner furcifer (fork-marked lemur). ... Family: Cheirogaleidae. Subfamily: Phanerinae.
Fork-crowned Lemur (Phaner furcifer) -- Fork-crowned Lemur (Phaner furcifer). MORPHOLOGY: Average body mass is about
Masoala Fork-crowned Lemur Phaner furcifer -- Phaner furcifer Masoala Fork-crowned Lemur. Web links for Phaner furcifer : ADW:
Lower Taxa of the Lemurs of Madagascar -- Phaner furcifer parienti. ... Original description: Phaner furcifer parienti
Lower Taxa of the Lemurs of Madagascar -- Phaner furcifer furcifer. (Blainville, 1839) IUCN Red List Status (1996):
Phaner furcifer - Threatened Species in Madagascar -- Rainforests. Conservation. Photos. Travel Tips. Tropical Fish. Guestbook. Contact.
Taxonomy : Common -- Fat-tailed dwarf lemur - Cheirogaleus medius Fork-marked dwarf lemur - Phaner furcifer
Lemurs species -- ...tattersalli SIMPONA Propithecus diadema diadema SIMPOVANDA Propithecus diadema edwardsi
Primate Info Net: Species and Subspecies of Primates Described ... -- Cheirogaleus minusculus Groves, 2000 (Lesser iron-grey dwarf lemur) 11. Phaner furcifer


CLICK HERE to make comments, add a link, or submit content for Phaner furcifer

Almost all pictures on this site were taken with a Konica Minolta camera




Recent articles

Madagascar fires mapped with Google Earth in real-time
Every year as much as one-third of Madagascar, one of the planet's most biodiverse islands, goes up in flames. Now a new tool gives scientists the ability to monitor and track Madagascar's fires in real-time through the Internet.


UNESCO lists rainforest parks of Madagascar as Heritage sites
(7/2/2007) UNESCO has listed six rainforest parks in Madagascar as World Heritage sites. The announcement comes as the Indian Ocean island nation has moved aggressively to protect its biologically-rich forests from further degradation.


Conservation is saving lemurs and helping people in Madagascar
(5/7/2007) Madagascar, an island nation that lies off the coast of southeastern Africa, has long been famous for its unique and diverse species of wildlife, especially lemurs--primates found nowhere else on the planet. In recent years, the island country has also become world-renowned for conservation efforts that are succeeding in spite of extraordinary pressures from a poor population that relies heavily on forest burning for basic subsistence. A large part of this success is due to the early efforts of Patricia Wright, a primatologist who has been working in the country for more than 20 years. Wright led the effort to launch the country's leading protected area and helped Madagascar become a leading global example of conservation despite its economic adversity.

home | photos index | search | about | contact

Unless otherwise noted, all content and images are the property of Rhett Butler, content copyright 2004-2007.
All rights reserved.