Tuesday, May 24, 2022 - Today we visit Andasibe park - it was a return visit for me - but no rain this time. This made for a much better visit.

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This is the Brown lemur peeking around at me.
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A Paradise Fly Catcher
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We were at about the same place I was several days before when a family of Diademed Sifaka came through the trees. We gave chase. They finally slowed down and obliged by posing on the trees.
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This one is enjoying sitting on a fallen tree.
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The Diademed Sifaka lemur can look pretty heavy (fat) at some angles.
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Nice Sifaka lemur tail and all.
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A nice pose holding on to the tree.
As we hiked in the forest we could hear the Indri calls all around us.
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We heard the Indri calls all morning and finally the guides spotted a few moving pretty quickly through the trees.

The Indri lemur is the largest lemur - up to 28 inches high and a body weight of up to 28 pounds. Unfortunately, it too is categorized as "Critically Endangered". Only one Indri has lived over a year in captivity and none have bred successfully while captive.
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An Indri on a throne of branches.

It is a diurnal tree-dweller related to the sifakas and, like all lemurs, it is native to Madagascar. It is revered by the Malagasy people and plays an important part in their myths and legends with various stories in existence accounting for its origin.
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This is quite a pose - looking very chill while eating breakfast.

The Indri is herbivorous and primarily leaf eating. It prefers young, tender leaves, but will also eat seeds, fruits, and flowers. Female Indri seems to have a greater preference for immature leaves than males do and spends more time foraging among them
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Beautiful Indri coat.

Most legends establish a close relationship between the Indri and humans, and many invoke common ancestry. In some regions, two brothers were believed to have lived together in the forest until one of them decided to leave and cultivate the land. That brother became the first human, and the brother who stayed in the forest became the first Indri.
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The guides were all excited when they spotted a female Indri lemur which was carrying a little tiny Indri. You can spot the baby's head tucked behind her right rear leg.

The Indri practices long-term monogamy, seeking a new partner only after the death of a mate. It lives in small groups consisting of the mated male and female and their maturing offspring. In the more fragmented forests of their range, the Indri may live in larger groups with several generations.
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A Lined Day gecko
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A Diademed Sifaka spotted on our hike out - note the curled tail.
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A Nose Horned chameleon
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Two-banded chameleon - male has two horns.
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Colorful fungus
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Some of the strangle vines are really embedded into the tree bark.
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An orange bug on a purple orchid.
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The Madagascar Kingfisher
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The hotel was a complex of two very nice hotels and a non-working graphite mine all owned by a third generation French family. They have also created an island where lemurs hang out.

The Red Ruffed lemur is a very clean animal and spends a lot of time grooming itself and in social grooming. The front teeth and the claw on the second toe of the hind foot are specially adapted for this behavior.
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Diademed Sifaka lemur.

The Diademed sifaka is classified as "Critically Endangered". As of the year 2002, population estimates for the species range between 6,000 and 10,000 individuals.
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A sitting Diademed Sifaka.

This species likes the trees, and only rarely are seen on the ground.
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Hanging on for dear life

It is a vertical clinger then when it decides to move goes latterly to the next tree.
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Black and White Ruffed lemur
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Up close with a Black and White Ruffed lemur

Black and White Ruffed lemurs are also known as the world's largest pollinators, due to their relationship with the traveler's palm. They have the unique ability, among pollinators, to open the tree's flowers. While the lemurs benefit by eating the nectar within the flowers, the tree benefits from the pollination that occurs when the pollen sticks to the lemurs' faces and gets transported to the next tree.
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Making certain not to miss any action
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Common Brown lemur is found in central to northern Madagascar.

Consistent with its large range, the common brown lemur occupies a variety of forest types, including lowland rainforests, montane rainforests, moist evergreen forests, and dry deciduous forests. They spend about 95% of their time in upper layers of the forest and less than 2% of their time on the ground.
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Common Brown lemur licking sap from his paw.

The Common Brown lemur's diet consists primarily of fruits, young leaves, and flowers. It also eats bark, sap, soil, and red clay. It can tolerate greater levels of toxic compounds from plants than other lemurs can.
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Common Brown lemur - look at the thickness of his fur!!!
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A nice perch for this little one.
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This pose reminds me of our beagle - Riley who will sit in the sun and close her eyes in the same way.
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Red Ruffled lemur who feeds on fruit as their main diets.
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Diademed Sifaka crowding a tree for a good spot.

The Diademed sifaka forms groups typically of two to ten individuals, which may include multiple male and female adults. Each troop defends an exclusive home territory 62 to 125 acres using perimeter scent territorial marking by both the males and females.
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Diademed Sifaka looking in the forest floor for food.
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Black and White Ruffed lemur is an endangered species - these guys are inquisitive and seem more self-confident.
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An intense looking Black and White Ruffed lemur.
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The golden eyes of the Black and White Ruffed lemur.

Their distinctive golden eyes have some stereoscopic vision but individuals vary with respect to their ability to see color; some can see colors as we do, and some individuals cannot. This genetic variation is well-known among many non-human primates.
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Black and White Ruffed lemur hanging on a branch

As a primarily tree-based species, they leap from branch to branch. Because ruffed lemurs are especially fond of fruit, they are also adept at suspending from their feet to help reach ripe fruit hanging from the tree branches.
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2 Black and White Ruffed lemurs on the same branch

They live an average of 19 years.
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Diademed Sifaka lemur moving across the ground - when the Sifaka moves they move in a sideways hop which leads them to be called "dancing" lemurs.
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Red Ruffled lemur on the forest floor looking for food when disturbed by a group of photographers.

While "Critically Endangered" zoos around the world are breeding them. The captive population of Red Ruffed lemurs is 590 animals in 2012.
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Black and White Ruffed lemur is inquisitive.
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Common Brown lemur on the trail
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As we were leaving Lemur Park a last picture of a Black and White Ruffed.


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