The Great Bamboo Lemur


         Prolemur simusis the largest of the bamboo lemurs. A dense olive-brown coat covers the rounded body, whilst the under parts and tail are grey-brown in colour with a russet tinge. As well as its large size, the greater bamboo lemur can be recognised by the prominent pale grey or white ear tufts. However, a recently discovered population of this species has a strikingly different deep golden-red coat, and no ear tufts. The blunt muzzles of bamboo lemurs give their faces a more rounded appearance than other members of the family. They have relatively long tails and long back legs for leaping vertically amongst the trees of their forest habitat.


Did You Know
            It is not known how the Greater Bamboo Lemur’s metabolism deals with the cyanide found in the bamboo shoots which is their only food, their typical daily dose would be enough to kill humans.

Size relative to a 6-ft human

Scientific Classification


Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Chordata
Class
Mammalia
Order
Primates
Family
Lemuridae
Genus
Prolemur

Other Names

English
Broad-nosed Gentle Lemur, Greater Bamboo Lemur
French
Grand Hapalémur, Hapalémur Simien
Spanish
Lemur Cariancho

Status
          The Greater Bamboo Lemur is classified under Critically Endangered in the IUCN Redlist.

Population
            On current evidence, this species may have the smallest population size of any lemur on the island. Only about 12 groups, totalling less than 100 individuals, have been documented in over 20 years of regional surveys. During 400 days of census work in Ranomafana, only three groups in total have been detected (with a maximum of 20 individuals confirmed).


Habitat
            Greater bamboo lemurs are found in primary and degraded eastern humid forests of Madagascar, and are usually found in areas with large woody bamboo. Occasionally they are found in degraded habitats without bamboo. The range of forests in which they occur ranges from large protected areas down to small forest fragments. The newly discovered population at Torotorofotsy inhabit marshland, a new habitat type for the species. The greater bamboo lemur has been sighted at elevations ranging from 121 m to 1600 m (397.0 to 5249.3 ft).


Range
            Sub fossil remains confirm that this species once had a widespread distribution in Madagascar that covered the northern, north-western, central and eastern portions of Madagascar. Today, the species has a much diminished range in the south-eastern and south-central rainforests of Madagascar and is estimated that P. simus now occupies only about 1-4% of its historical range, reported confirmed sightings of Greater Bamboo Lemurs in only 11 of 70 survey localities.


Biology
          This species is associated with forests abundant in giant bamboo. It subsists predominantly on bamboo, but its diet includes seven plant species representing three different families. In Ranomafana National Park, the bamboo Cathariostachys madagascariensis can account for as much as 95% of the diet, with shoots, young and mature leaves, and pith being consumed. Observations of wild populations and animals in captivity suggest that this species is cathemeral, active both during the day and at night throughout the year. They live in polygamous groups that can occupy home ranges of 40-60 ha or more. Mating begins in May or June, with infants typically born in October and November. Females usually give birth to a single young each year.



Threats
            The rainforests of Madagascar are being widely cleared by slash-and-burn techniques and this habitat destruction is one of the major threats to the survival of the greater bamboo lemur. Bamboo is also being cleared in some areas, and this lemur is targeted by hunters in other regions. The known range of the greater bamboo lemur is highly restricted and this implies further threats to survival.


Conservation Measures
            The greater bamboo lemur is protected within two areas in Madagascar, however, even within Ranomafana National Park the native trees are being exploited and this species is at risk. Further research into these little-known lemurs is urgently needed and more extensive surveys of the area may well reveal further isolated populations in need of protection.


References
http://www.junglewalk.com/popup.asp?type=s&AnimalWebsiteID=2358
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/07/photogalleries/animal-photo/photo3 html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_bamboo_lemur
http://pin.primate.wisc.edu/factsheets/entry/greater_bamboo_lemur/taxon
http://www.edgeofexistence.org/mammals/species_info.php?id=24

Christmas Frigate Bird


The Christmas frigate bird is a very large, mostly black seabird with a glossy green sheen to feathers of the head and back. Females are larger than males; they have a white breast and belly, a narrow white collar around the lower neck and a whitish bar across the upperwing. Males are dark all over apart from a white patch on the lower abdomen. They have a red gular pouch, which becomes more vibrant in the breeding season and is inflated during mating displays. Juveniles have more mottled feathers on their upper-parts, a pale fawn head, white throat and a russet necklace. They take around four years to gain adult plumage.


Did You Know
           These rare seabirds are known to forage for food up to hundreds, and sometimes thousands of kilometers away from their colony. One has been documented undertaking a non-stop, 26-hour flight, covering 4000 km flying from Christmas Island via Sumatra and Borneo then back. They are also known for aerial piracy from Sea Bobbies. 

Scientific Classification
Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Chordata
Class
Aves
Order
Pelecaniformes
Family
Fregatidae
Genus
Fregata
Species
Fregata andrewsi


Other Names
English
Andrew's Frigatebird
French
Frégate d'Andrews

Status
The Christmas frigatebird is classified as Critically Endangered (CR) on the IUCN Red List 2007, and listed on Appendix I of CITES.

Population
          The most recent population census indicates a population of 2,400-4,800 mature individuals (2003), roughly equivalent to 3,600-7,200 individuals in total.


Habitat
        Although these birds do not settle on the water, they inhabit the open ocean, returning to land only to roost and breed. Both nesting and roosting occur on a small area of Christmas Island, in tall forest close to the shore. Nesting sites are preferentially in the lee of the prevailing southeast winds


Range
The Christmas frigate bird is found in the northeast Indian Ocean, these birds are only known to breed on Christmas Island. The distribution of birds at sea is not well documented but they may wander widely and are known from the coasts of Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and northern Australia.


Biology
Males Christmas frigate birds begin their mating displays in late December, inflating their scarlet throat pouches during courtship. Egg laying occurs between March and May and nests are positioned high in tall forest trees. A single egg is laid and both parents take it in turns during the 50 to 54 day incubation period; fledglings can remain dependent on their parents for six to seven months after their first flight.


The Christmas frigate bird feeds mainly on flying fish and cephalopods (such as squid), which are scooped from the surface of the water. A proportion of its food is obtained by harassing other seabirds such as red-footed boobies, until they are forced to regurgitate their meal.


Threats
          Habitat destruction and human predation have been the major causes of population decline in the past; dust pollution from phosphate mine driers caused one major nesting site to be abandoned. Dust suppression equipment has since been installed and human predation has ceased since this species has been protected. Birds that have been displaced in the past may now be using sub-optimal habitat, which could pose a threat to their survival. The Christmas frigate bird is confined to a few breeding colonies on a single island and this, together with their low reproductive rate, makes the population alarmingly vulnerable to any chance event.


       A possible threat is the introduced yellow crazy ant Anoplolepis gracilipeswhich formed super-colonies during the 1990s and spread rapidly to cover about 25% of the island or about 3,400 ha. Control measures have so far been unable to eradicate this non-native species, but to date frigate birds have not apparently been adversely affected by them. However, ant super-colonies alter island ecology by killing the dominant life-form, the red crab Gecaroidea natalis, and by farming scale insects which damage the trees, which could be a reason for population decline.


Conservation Measures
          CITES Appendix I. Listed as vulnerable under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999. The Christmas Island National Park was established in 1980, and has since been extended to include two of the three current breeding colonies (90% of the population). A recovery plan has been completed and a study using satellite telemetry to study movements has been underway since 2005. A control programme for A. gracilipes was initiated after 2000, including aerial baiting in 2002, and effectively eliminated the ant from 2,800 ha of forest (95% of its former extent). However, the ant population continued to increase, covering upwards of 500 ha by 2006. Despite continued control efforts, ants remained persistent in 2009, and perpetual baiting may be the only means of controlling them. Efforts are underway to find alternative bait that is not toxic to invertebrates on the island. Plans have been established to control the scale bugs that the ants tend for their sugar secretions in order to reduce this food supply, but there remains no evidence that they are adversely affecting frigate bird colonies.


References
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_Frigatebird
http://www.birdlife.org/datazone/speciesfactsheet.php?id=3847
http://www.australiangeographic.com.au/society/fight-for-the-christmas-island-frigatebird.htm
http://orientalbirdimages.org/search.php?Bird_ID=1175
http://www.christmas.net.au/parks/birds/birds_of_christmas_island.htm