Lepilemur hubbardi Louis Jr., Engberg, Lei, Geng, Sommer, Randriamampionona, Randriamanana, Zaonarivelo et al., 2006 is a animal in the Lepilemuridae family, order Primates, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Lepilemur hubbardi Louis Jr., Engberg, Lei, Geng, Sommer, Randriamampionona, Randriamanana, Zaonarivelo et al., 2006 (Lepilemur hubbardi Louis Jr., Engberg, Lei, Geng, Sommer, Randriamampionona, Randriamanana, Zaonarivelo et al., 2006)
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Lepilemur hubbardi Louis Jr., Engberg, Lei, Geng, Sommer, Randriamampionona, Randriamanana, Zaonarivelo et al., 2006

Lepilemur hubbardi Louis Jr., Engberg, Lei, Geng, Sommer, Randriamampionona, Randriamanana, Zaonarivelo et al., 2006

Hubbard's sportive lemur is an endangered endemic sportive lemur of Madagascar, found only in southwestern Madagascar's Zombitse-Vohibasia National Park.

Family
Genus
Lepilemur
Order
Primates
Class
Mammalia

About Lepilemur hubbardi Louis Jr., Engberg, Lei, Geng, Sommer, Randriamampionona, Randriamanana, Zaonarivelo et al., 2006

Hubbard's sportive lemur, also called the Zombitse sportive lemur, is a species of sportive lemur that is endemic to Madagascar. Its total body length ranges from approximately 51 to 59 centimeters (20 to 23 inches), and its tail measures between 23 and 25 centimeters (9.1 to 9.8 inches). This lemur is found in dry transitional forests in Zombitse-Vohibasia National Park in southwestern Madagascar, located north of the Onilahy River and south of the Mangoky River. It is listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), and faces threats from habitat loss and degradation, forest fires, and unsustainable hunting. The species was first described as a new species in 2006, after mitochondrial DNA sequencing showed it was significantly distinct from the red-tailed sportive lemur. It was originally named L. hubbardi, but this name was found to be incorrectly formed, and was corrected to L. hubbardorum in 2009. An 18-night survey recorded 234 sightings of Hubbard's sportive lemur in Zombitse-Vohibasia National Park. Extrapolated data from this survey estimates that there are 16,500 to 18,000 individuals living within the park.

Photo: (c) makkusuv, all rights reserved, uploaded by makkusuv

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Mammalia Primates Lepilemuridae Lepilemur

More from Lepilemuridae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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