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- From: Joel K. 'Jay' Furr (jfurr@furrs.org)
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- Subject: alt.fan.lemurs: Frinkquently Asked Questions (Part 6 of 7)
- Summary: Duke University Primate Center
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- Official USENET Alt.Fan.Lemurs Frinkquently Asked Questions
- Part 6 of 7 -- Duke University Primate Center
-
- This section of the FAQ deals with the Duke University Primate Center,
- the largest population of Lemurs outside their native island of Madagas-
- car. Make sure to read the sections (below) about tours, souvenirs, and
- the all-important Adopt-A-Lemur program. DUPC needs funds to continue
- and extend its work and you can help. It also discusses what little we
- know about the programs carried on by the Jersey Zoo in the Channel
- Islands of the United Kingdom.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- The Questions
-
- (1) What IS the Duke University Primate Center?
- (2) What programs take place at DUPC? What animals live there?
- (3) What other programs take place at DUPC?
- (4) Can I donate money to DUPC?
- (5) How do I go about arranging a tour of the Primate Center?
- (6) What is the mailing address of the Duke University Primate Center?
- (7) What is Adopt-A-Lemur?
- (8) Can I buy DUPC souvenirs through the mail?
- (9) What if I want to donate a LOT of money?
- (10) Is anyone else engaged in breeding lemurs to save them from extinction?
- (11) Can I reach DUPC over the Internet?
- (12) When you adopt a lemur, do you always get the same animal that
- anyone else adopting a lemur of that species gets, right down to
- being sent a form letter and the same photo?
- (13) Do you have any unbiased reports from observers who visited the
- Primate Center?
- (14) Does DUPC need volunteer helpers?
- (15) Are the DUPC lemurs as intelligent as other primates?
-
- ------------------------------
-
- The Answers
-
- (1) What IS the Duke University Primate Center?
- The Duke University Primate Center (DUPC) began in 1958 as the Center
- for Prosimian Biology at Yale University. In 1966, the Yale colony was
- relocated to North Carolina and moved into its present buildings in
- 1968.
-
- From 1968 to 1973, Dr. John Buettner-Janusch served as Director and
- research was oriented toward behavior, genetics, and biochemistry. The
- colony grew to about 250 animals representing 10 species during this
- time. Several interim Directors served from 1973 to 1977.
-
- In 1977, Dr. Elwyn L. Simons became the Director. He expanded the scope
- of research to include conservation and the study of fossils. He also
- increased the educational opportunities and training for both under-
- graduate and graduate students. Under his leadership the colony grew to
- more than 700 animals representing 33 species and subspecies. Recent
- years have seen the overall size of the colony decrease to the current
- 540 animals representing 29 species and subspecies (see below).
-
- On May 15, 1991, Dr. Kenneth E. Glander became the Director of the DUPC
- and Dr. Simons took on the role of Scientific Director. As Scientific
- Director, Simons will concentrate on teaching, research, and the
- management of the Center's collaborative programs with Madagascar.
- Glander intends to build the Primate Center's programs around the issue
- of biological diversity. He will also expand the environmental educa-
- tion opportunities to include primary and secondary school science
- teachers.
-
- Education of the public is equally important for the future of these
- endangered primates. Outreach programs aimed at increasing environmen-
- tal awareness of elementary and secondary school children could be
- developed and disseminated via a public exhibit hall and classroom space
- which would be built outside the gates of the Center to prevent disrup-
- tion of the captive breeding and conservation programs. The pavilion
- area would serve as a staging area for tours of the animal colony and
- presentation areas for exhibits as well as providing modest office space
- for staff and volunteers involved in educational and promotional ac-
- tivities.
-
- One of the missions of the Primate Center is to assist in international
- efforts to prevent the extinction of Madagascar's most endangered
- primates.
-
- The Primate Center accomplishes this through:
-
- * behavioral and ecological research
- * international conservation programs
- * in-country training programs
- * captive breeding
-
- The Center is funded by the National Science Foundation, Duke Univer-
- sity, and private donations.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (2) What programs take place at DUPC? What animals live there?
-
- The DUPC primate collection consists only of prosimians. There are three
- groups of living prosimians:
-
- * the lemurs of Madagascar
- * the lorises and galagos of Asia and Africa
- * the tarsiers of certain East Asian islands (although these animals are
- being placed by some in taxonomic categories closer to apes, monkeys,
- and humans.)
-
- The majority of the animals housed in the DUPC colony are lemurs from
- Madagascar. Lemurs have lived isolated on their island home located off
- the southeast coast of Africa for more than 50 million years.
-
- In recent years the forests of Madagascar, once teeming with lemurs,
- have been reduced by more than 90% as a result of increased human
- population pressure. Lemur populations in the wild are rapidly declin-
- ing. As human population expands, increased need of food causes in-
- tensified hunting of lemurs. Also, the lemurs' habitat is destroyed by
- agricultural "slash and burn" practices. The result is that many lemur
- species are threatened with extinction.
-
- A principal objective of the Primate Center continues to be the captive
- breeding of endangered prosimians. In order to achieve that goal,
- efforts are being made to reduce the size of the Primate Center's colony
- so that it can better utilize the limited resources by concentrating on
- the most highly endangered species.
-
- In 1987, World Wildlife International announced that the Malagasy lemurs
- are the most gravely endangered group of primates in the world. Follow-
- ing this declaration, special- ists from Madagascar, Europe, and America
- met and agreed that the genetic diversity of the following 10 prosimians
- was the most severely threatened:
-
-
- * 1) the Lake Alaotra bamboo lemur (Hapalemur griseus alaotrensis)
- + 2) the golden bamboo lemur (Hapalemur aureus)
- 3) the greater bamboo lemur (Hapalemur simus)
- * 4) the blue-eyed lemur (Lemur macaco flavifrons)
- * + 5) the red-ruffed lemur (Varecia variegata rubra)
- * + 6) the aye-aye (Daubentonia madagascarensis)
- * 7) the crowned sifaka (Propithecus verreauxi coronatus)
- * + 8) the golden-crowned sifaka (Propithecus tattersalli)
- * + 9) the diademed sifaka (Propithecus diadema)
- * 10) the mongoose lemur (Lemur mongoz)
-
- The DUPC currently holds eight of these species (Nos. 1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,
- 10) as indicated by asterixes, and hopes to get some golden bamboo lemurs very
- soon.
-
- The Center's current captive breeding efforts are focused on saving 5 of
- these 10 most endangered species of lemurs, (Nos. 2, 5, 6, 8, 9) as
- indicated by plus signs. The plight of these species is characterized
- by the fact that there are probably fewer than 100 golden bamboo lemurs
- left in the wild. This is an emergency situation if DUPC is to preserve
- the biological diversity necessary for a viable captive breeding
- program. The aye-aye may be in similar difficulty. The choice of these
- five species is not haphazard but rather based on the fact that the
- Primate Center has successfully maintained and bred closely related
- species and the fact that the need for preserving genetic diversity in
- these five species appears to be greatest. Furthermore, all the species
- listed above and, for that matter, all the species held at Duke, are bred in
- captivity and breeding records kept to ensure maximum diversity.
-
- The Primate Center has both diurnal (day-time active) and nocturnal
- (nighttime active) prosimians.
-
- Diurnal animals are housed in outdoor runs or in Natural Habitat
- Enclosures encompassing large tracts of the Duke Forest. All animals
- housed outdoors have heated winter sleeping quarters. These enclosures
- are vital for future planned reintroduction of the lemurs to their
- native habitats. Here, animals have the opportunity to learn how to
- find their own food, avoid predation, and roam in sufficient space to
- form natural social groupings. 65 acres of rich Duke Forest habitat
- offer a unique opportunity for study in a natural setting.
-
- A new Nocturnal Animal Building houses most of the night-time active
- prosimians. This recent addition to the Center was designed to control
- lighting, humidity, and temperature, critical for the well-being of
- these animals.
-
- Approximately 85% of the DUPC colony is captive-bred. No other zoo or
- institution has successfully bred so many different prosimian species.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (3) What other programs take place at DUPC?
-
- Fossils:
-
- Another important and unique aspect of the Primate Center is its
- collection of fossil primates representing prosimians, monkeys, apes,
- and other mammals. The collection consists of more than 10,000 fossils
- ranging in age from less than 1,000 years to more than 60 million years
- old.
-
- Housing both living and fossil primates in the same center is sig-
- nificant because the surviving prosimians are often called "living
- fossils," providing clues about the Earth's past environments.
-
- International extension programs in Madagascar:
-
- DUPC promotes international relations and cooperation through research,
- education, and conservation programs. Primate Center staff are assisting
- the Malagasy government to reopen Parc Ivoloina as a zoological and
- botanical conservation center. The joint goal of the park project is to
- increase the Malagasy people's awareness of the importance of conserva-
- tion through education, thereby making the native population cognizant
- of the unique flora and fauna of their island.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (4) Can I donate money to DUPC?
-
- Donations are gratefully accepted by the Duke University Primate Center.
- The address to send them to is DUPC, 3705 Erwin Road, Durham NC 27705.
- If you like, ask them to put you on their mailing list and send you
- their newsletter.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (5) How do I go about arranging a tour of the Primate Center?
-
- The Primate Center is located at 3705 Erwin Road, Durham, North Caro-
- lina. Durham is found on any road map of North Carolina, and you can buy
- a Durham street map when you get there. (It's in the big Duke Forest
- area that you get to off Routes 15-501 and 751.)
-
- Admission costs to the Primate Center are as follows:
-
- Adult $5.00
- Child (12 and under) $2.50
- Senior Citizen $2.50
- Duke student $3.00
-
- The Primate Center is open Monday through Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.,
- and Saturdays from 8:30 a.m. to noon. You can't just show up; you MUST
- make an appointment. The number to call is (919) 489-3364.
-
- The tour is well worth the trip to Durham and the money. The lemurs are
- just as curious about humans as humans are about them and the experience
- of wandering from enclosure to enclosure is eerily like being studied
- back. You'll get to meet Blue Devil, the first aye-aye born in the
- Western Hemisphere, as well as the sifakas so clever that the DUPC
- people had to put an extra bolt on the outside of their door to keep
- them from jimmying the lock and escaping. The lemurs are wonderful
- little animals! Go see them.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (6) What is the mailing address of the Duke University Primate Center?
-
- Duke University Primate Center
- 3705 Erwin Road
- Durham, NC 27705
- (919) 684-2535 or (919) 489-3364
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (7) What is Adopt-A-Lemur?
-
- You'll hear a lot about Adopt-A-Lemur on alt.fan.lemurs.
- Adopt-a-lemur is a means by which friends of DUPC can donate $50 to
- $250 to the Center and "adopt" one of the lemurs, receiving letters
- and photos and other information about your lemur. So far, dozens of
- animals have been adopted either jointly or individually by
- alt.fan.lemurs readers. Bob Smart even adopted a mated pair of
- ringtails as a wedding gift for a couple of lemur-loving newlyweds.
- Lemur adoption isn't just a cost-effective way to donate money while
- receiving something in return -- it's also tax deductible.
-
- If you would like to contribute financially to the programs of the
- Duke University Primate Center, you can! While the $2,000 needed to
- equip out an enclosure for a mated couple may be beyond the range of
- most people, there is an Adopt-A-Lemur program that allows one to
- make a difference at an affordable price.
-
- The cost of adopting any given lemur is pegged to the approximate
- cost of keeping that animal fed and medically cared for for one year.
- Hence, adoption costs for the smallest animals are usually $50 and
- the largest and/or rarest animals are usually $250. There are ranges
- in between of $100, $125, and $150 as well. For additional informa-
- tion, contact: Carol Holman (919) 489-3364. Duke University Primate
- Center, 3705 Erwin Road, Durham NC 27705.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (8) Can I buy DUPC souvenirs through the mail?
-
- Yes. Duke offers a lot of souvenirs, from t-shirts to frisbees to
- coffee mugs to posters to VERY nice gold-plated Christmas ornaments.
- Since the lineup of souvenirs offered changes from time to time, an
- actual price list will not be listed here. Instead, to get the price
- list, drop them a postcard and ask for the latest catalog (DUPC, 3705
- Erwin Road, Durham NC 27705) or telephone (919) 489-3364.
-
- The money earned from the souvenirs goes to support the lemurs. Buy
- some!
-
- ---------------
-
- (9) What if I want to donate a LOT of money?
-
- Well, you can. Duke got a large grant from the National Science
- Foundation to renovate all its caging some time back, but the grant is
- contingent on matching funds. As funds are donated to Duke or become
- available, the NSF cuts loose more of the grant money. Duke will be
- happy to explain to you the various amounts of money needed to, say,
- build a new silo-style cage and will even put up a big nameplate naming
- the cage after you if you want. Again, you need to call Duke directly
- to get all this set up. The donations are tax deductible.
-
- ---------------
-
- (10) Is anyone else engaged in breeding lemurs to save them from
- extinction?
-
- You bet. Many zoos are engaged in a joint breeding project coordinated
- by a scientific body known as the Taxon Advisory Group. The TAG keeps
- track of lemur pedigrees and tries to ensure the most diverse gene pool
- possible by matching lemurs from various zoos and centers. Duke is the
- _largest_ center, with the world's largest collection of prosimians
- outside Madagascar, but it's by no means the only one. Many American
- zoos are involved in these programs.
-
- European readers interested in participating in sponsorship of animals
- or simply in visiting a breeding center are encouraged to contact Gerald
- Durrell, the famous British zoologist, at the Jersey Wildlife Preserva-
- tion Trust, located in the British Channel Islands. We don't know much
- about their programs, but the address to write to if you want to do the
- research for us is:
-
- The Trust Secretary
- Jersey Wildlife Preservation Trust
- Les Augres Manor
- Trinity, Jersey
- British Channel Islands
-
- Let us know what you find out if you write them!
-
- We've also been told that the Hamerton Wildlife Centre, Huntingdon,
- Cambridgeshire, has a lot of lemurs.
-
- ---------------
-
-
- (11) Can I reach DUPC over the Internet?
-
- Yes. Write them at primate@acpub.duke.edu, or visit their web page at
- http://www.duke.edu/web/primate/
-
- ---------------
-
- (12) When you adopt a lemur, do you always get the same animal that
- anyone else adopting a lemur of that species gets, right down to being
- sent a form letter and the same photo?
-
- Not necessarily. Duke is willing to let people adopt specific animals
- if they wish, logistics allowing, but often sends out the default
- package for an animal if no particular animal of a given species is
- listed.
-
- Joao de Souza noted that his girlfriend (presumably Maria Drago) had
- received, after adopting a new baby aye-aye, Cruella, the same photo of
- an adult aye-aye that had appeared in his newspaper about a different
- animal. He asked if Duke always sent out the same photo regardless of
- animal.
-
- The question was answered on two levels:
-
- One: the truth: Cruella is being kept away from the general public and
- disruptions of her routine as much as possible. Dr. Glander could
- probably describe this in greater detail but basically, the intent is to
- keep the aye-ayes wild and prevent the 'imprinting' which took place in
- "Blue Devil" from happening again. Blue Devil is a weird critter that
- doesn't get along with fellow aye-ayes.
-
- So, yes, we don't stick cameras in her face a lot.
-
- Incidentally, so many lemurs were adopted through Adopt-a-lemur that the
- volunteer staff at DUPC is somewhat overburdened getting all the packets
- for all the animals out with individual photos of each specific animal.
- So, yes, occasionally 'default photos' are used.
-
- The other answer to the Cruella question:
-
- Nosferatu, one of the adult aye-ayes, was bemused because, during one of
- his nocturnal forays through the Primate Center's overhead ductwork and
- down into Dr. Glander's office, he had discovered that he was named
- after a vampire. He looked up 'vampire' and found that vampires cannot
- be seen in mirrors or captured on film. Hence, he got into photographer
- David Haring's supplies and started trying to take pictures of himself.
- Since David doesn't keep a Polaroid camera around, all Nosferatu managed
- to do was fill up several rolls of film on several cameras with pictures
- of himself staring bemusedly into the lens. When the rolls were sent
- off to be developed, DUPC ordered the standard thirty copies of each
- shot to sell to the visitors. Imagine their surprise when they wound up
- with several hundred photos of Nosferatu. Hence the reason why, to this
- day, they're still trying to foist Nosferatu pictures off on anyone we
- can.
-
- ------------
-
- (13) Do you have any unbiased reports from observers who visited the
- Primate Center?
-
- Sure!
-
- Jim Griffith (griffith@dweeb.fx.com) wrote:
-
- So I just got back from my two-week, cross-country road trip, and the
- first place I visited was the DUPC in North Carolina. I got to meet
- everyone there, mainly Dorothy who works the front desk, Dr. Glander
- (who was really busy, of course), Carol Holman (ditto), and Stephanie
- (sigh, talk about an attractive, intelligent lady. Knows the lemurs by
- name without resorting to tags, knows how to gross out tourists with
- stories of disgusting insects, you name it).
-
- So I got to meet Agrippa, who is, of course, a serious chick magnet. I
- *told* you people that chicks dig golden crowned sifakas. It was also
- cool, because they just picked up another pair of GCS'es, which they are
- keeping in a cage inside one of the larger enclosures. Since I'm a
- "major contributor" (heeheeheehee), and since I've adopted one of the
- GCS'es, they took me through the enclosure to see the two new GCS'es
- (note - if you plan on visiting the DUPC, don't bother to ask to do this
- - they'll deny that they do this). It was really cool walking through
- this forested area, seeing these red-ruffed lemurs lounging on overhang-
- ing branches all around me. And I could swear I saw this one ring-tail
- wearing a miner's helmet and wielding a pickaxe stick his head out of a
- hole, see Stephanie, and duck back before she could see him. Gonna be a
- wild time in Durham for a while... Anyways, I got to see the two
- GCS'es, and while I was looking, the male jumped over to me and started
- whuffling, as if to say "you eyeing my woman?". As we were leaving,
- they both leaped over to the door, hoping to find a way out - apparently
- they take every opportunity to get out (which is in character, of
- course).
-
- I also got to see Nigel ("You lookin' at me?"), the "anything-but"
- gentle lemurs (but not Be-bop - apparently he's in solitary), the
- blue-eyed lemurs named after famous movie stars (which, by the way, are
- the only other primate species besides humans to have blue eyes), the
- one-armed red-ruffed lemur, and the aye-ayes (talk about *ugly*...). I
- had to laugh as one of the ring-tails slipped Stephanie's car keys out
- of her pocket while she was talking to us. Far be it from *me* to turn
- them in - they know where I live.
-
- Another thing is that photos really don't do the lemurs justice. You
- can't fully appreciate a lemur until you've met one in person and had
- him lift your wallet. For starters, the ones which look bigger in
- photos end up being smaller than expected and the smaller-looking ones
- end up being bigger. The GCS'es are much larger than I expected, and
- the gentle lemurs (otherwise known as "those lemur assassins") are much
- smaller. Their mobility is kind of strange too. You expect them to
- either be completely manic or virtually comatose, and in point of fact
- they alternate between the two states. You'll watch a Coquerel's sifaka
- sitting calmly on a tree branch, when suddenly he's leaped 20 feet to
- hang on the cage wall and stare you straight in the eye. It's an
- incredible thing to watch.
-
- Anyways, it was a really cool tour, and I came away with a lot more
- respect for the center and its people. I showed up expecting it to be
- much more glamorous, but it's a working facility, and that's what you
- quickly notice. They have something like 2500 individuals, 2000 or so of
- which have been loaned out to zoos or other institutions ("lemur pimps"?
- Hmmmm...), so the center has 503 individuals. Of the 2500 that the
- center is responsible for, 91% of them were bred there - only 9%
- represent captured lemurs. That's pretty impressive. If you want to go
- for a tour, I just have a couple of suggestions. First off, they're an
- institution which is consistently under-funded, so have the good manners
- not to argue about money (the tour is cheap anyways). Second off,
- please remember that these people do serious work. They're not in the
- business of entertaining tourists. So check the place out, enjoy
- yourself, but try to keep your place and don't tie them up for hours,
- expecting them to entertain you.
-
- Jim
- -----------
-
- (14) Does DUPC need volunteer helpers?
-
- Sure! Although they'll take volunteers, be aware that there are only so
- many tour guides needed, though. Some volunteers help out with animal
- records and others help out in the fossil lab, and so forth. Just call
- Duke at (919) 489-3364 if you live close enough to be able to help out.
-
- While we're on the subject, here's an account Joel Furr wrote about what
- it's like to volunteer there:
-
- Those of you who've been to the DUPC know what a cool place it is.
-
- However, I just wanted to let you know how much more interesting it is
- when you're volunteering there and can come and go around the place.
-
- My volunteer assignment, at present, is to wander down to the techs'
- logbook on weekends and take pages up to the computer to enter into the
- various animals' records. For example, if the tech feeding the lemurs
- in enclosure NHE2 notice the Lemur catta playing banjo over by the pond,
- he or she will make a note in the logbook that looks like this:
-
- 17/Nov/93 L.c. in NHE-2 seen playing banjo again. Sounded like
- "Dixie." Didn't identify specific animals.
-
- And then I come along and enter it into the NHE-2 Lemur catta file. If,
- on the other hand, it's about a specific lemur such as, say, Nosferatu:
-
- 17/Nov/93 D.m. Nosferatu #____ OR VIII b seen with Dr. Simons'
- copy of Das Kapital again. Book was taken away from him and was
- replaced with some old Richie Rich comics. Nosferatu went "EEEEP"
- when we gave him the comics.
-
- I'd pull up Nosferatu's file, using his ID number, and add the log entry
- to the list. In other words, I get to pull up records on ALL THE LEMURS
- THERE and see what they've been up to for the last three years or so (or
- however long they've been there.)
-
- Some of the techs have a sense of humor. Or perhaps it's the lemurs.
- Not sure which, really. Reading about the aye-ayes going "EEEEP" and
- eating all their aye-aye glop is fairly amusing. [On the other hand,
- reading about some of the lemurs in one of the large outdoor habitats
- killing infants from other species in the neighboring habitat was a
- little grim.]
-
- Another cool thing about working as a volunteer there is giving tours.
- I have only given one tour so far [at the time this was written] and
- that was pretty much of a practice tour, given when a group of five
- people called one morning to ask for a tour and I didn't know enough to
- tell them that all our tours were filled. So, I gave them the standard
- DUPC stroll-around-in-a-big-circle-and-look-at-all-the-lemurs-
- especially-Diphda tour, with help from the educational coordinator,
- Carol Holman, who I brought along so she could correct me when I left
- things out or got my facts wrong. Giving lemur tours is right up there,
- I think, with being captain of that jungle cruise boat at Walt Disney
- World. The lemurs study the people on the tour just as intently, if not
- more so, than the people on the tour study the lemurs. Some of the
- lemurs, like the crowned lemurs, have a terrific knack for sneaking up
- to the wall of their pen to eye you suspiciously, then bounding away in
- no time at all the minute you glance around.
-
- Lemurs can jump better than anyone. When some of the lemurs, like the
- Coquerel's Sifakas, are bounding around the upper branches of their
- tree, or swinging from the roof of their enclosure to the walls and back
- again, you begin to wonder if they didn't independently evolve Flubber.
-
- Lemurs can also make noise better than just about anyone. Well,
- specifically those loony red-ruffed lemurs. Red-ruffed lemurs and
- black-and-white ruffed lemurs have an alarm call that they use whenever
- they're startled, afraid, alarmed, or just bored. Since they're not
- very bright, as lemurs go, they sound the alarm call once every half
- hour or so and keep it up for a few minutes until they finally realize
- that they're not being devoured alive and that they might as well get
- back to lying in unnatural positions on branches looking very comfort-
- able. We were standing in front of a pen of red-ruffeds the other day
- when they did the call and it was like watching bullfrogs: their mouths
- and throats expanded and out came this horrid cackling call that would
- have made any predator handy bolt for cover.
-
- Some of the lemurs have interesting personalities. The aforementioned
- Diphda, a red-ruffed lemur, is known as the three-legged lemur since she
- had to have a forelimb amputated when she was very young, and as a
- result was hand-raised by humans and likes them a lot. Diphda will come
- to the side of her pen when tours walk by and grin out at them, and if
- you do it right, she'll let you pet her on the head or talk to her. She
- seems to have very little difficulty bounding around her pen, three legs
- and all.
-
- Bebop, on the other hand, is not kept where tours can see him. A short,
- surly-looking gentle bamboo lemur, he once fanged a tech so thoroughly
- on the hands that she'll always have scars in the webbing between her
- thumbs and forefingers. One of the entries on Bebop in the logfile
- refers to him being incarcerated in Maximum Security Cellblock #3. He
- LOOKS very cute, you see, in a surly sort of way, and clings to the bars
- looking like he wants to nuzzle you, but if you reach tentatively out to
- him, you get to see some VERY sharp little teeth. Withdrawing your hand
- quickly from his biting range is advised.
-
- One of the more interesting experiences I've had since starting as a
- volunteer at DUPC was getting to suit up in booties and a full body
- coverall in order to visit the new Diademed Sifakas still in quarantine
- in one of the subterranean chambers of the Center. The Sifakas are
- three in number: a mother and her son, and a sad-looking male who at
- last report was getting over his captivity and adjusting to life
- "inside." With any luck, the male will form a mating bond with the
- female. We had to suit up to visit them since no one knows what
- diseases a new species might carry, and no one knows how vulnerable they
- might be to human diseases. If we'd actually gone into their cage, we'd
- even have had to put on masks. [Note: the Diademed Sifaka female died in
- the first half of 1994, but the son and male are in fine shape. DUPC
- plans to bring in two females for them in 1995.]
-
- If you're sitting at the computer on the top floor of the Primate
- Center, you occasionally hear a loud THUNK from behind you. One side of
- the corridor looks out through large windows onto the enclosure where
- Flavia and Nigel and their offspring, bouncy Coquerel's Sifakas all,
- live. It's a large enclosure with lots of branches and things to swing
- on, and it's two stories high. They like to peer out at the people
- walking by, and sometimes, when I'm sitting there entering data, they'll
- leap to the window and peer in at me. That's the reason for those
- occasional THUNKs. You'll look around, and a black face surrounded by
- glossy white and gold fur will be peering in at you. [Due to cage
- renovation, Nigel and company have now been moved to a large silo-style
- cage further away from the Center proper.]
-
- As Dr. Kenneth Glander, the director of the Primate Center told me on
- Saturday, lemurs really WOULD go nuts trying to get Twinkies and Big K
- Grape if they had a chance. Lemurs are insatiable lovers of sweets. We
- were right all along!
-
- Some of them do make a noise that sounds sorta like "Frink." Especially
- the Mongoose Lemurs. It's a grunting sort of "Frink," but you can
- tell, that's what they're saying. I think the Red-Ruffed Lemurs' alarm
- call is a loud, squawking "Ptang" as well.
-
- ------------
-
- (15) Are the DUPC lemurs as intelligent as other primates?
-
- Joel Furr wrote:
-
- Lemurs have been denigrated by some as "less intelligent" than more
- advanced primates such as monkeys, gorillas, and man. Leaving
- aside comparisons such as lemurs dancing naked in the woods while
- men build atomic bombs, I personally feel that lemurs show a great
- deal of intelligence and imagination.
-
- Nowhere is this more evident than at the Duke University Primate
- Center's Coquerel's Sifaka area. The Sifakas overcame locks and
- electric shocks to achieve their cryptic ends and managed to outwit
- their keepers for quite a while.
-
- It started one day when the lemurs in the core area downstairs in
- the Primate Center building were found bounding around in the
- hallway after David Haring, the colony manager, had been through
- the area feeding the animals. Haring thought he might have left
- their door ajar after feeding them, so he made sure it was shut and
- went back to his work elsewhere. Soon thereafter, the lemurs were
- found bounding around in the hallway again. Upon observation, it
- was discovered that one of the lemurs, Constantine, had figured out
- how to work the door from the inside and get out. A special lock
- had to be installed to keep Constantine and his clan in their room.
- Nevertheless, Constantine didn't give up. Now and then, a tour
- group would go through the area and, in the process, jostle his
- door. Constantine would tiptoe over, lemur-style, and check his
- door... just in case.
-
- Another Coquerel's Sifaka, Sabina by name, had some eating
- problems. As the dominant female of her group, she had rights of
- first refusal to all food placed in her room, and she never saw an
- item of food she didn't like. Normal Coquerel's Sifakas weigh
- about 8 pounds. By the time Sabina had gotten done gorging herself
- up to her maximum weight, she weighed 23. Pictures of Sabina at
- this time show a ball of fur that looks like three lemurs huddled
- together. Normal Coquerel's Sifakas can spring great distances
- with amazing balance and precision. Sabina, at maximum weight,
- could hop a few inches. Then hop again. Apparently, it was both
- funny and sad. Clearly something had to be done. The Primate
- Center experimented with an invisible fencing collar, which would
- give Sabina electric shocks if she got too close to the food
- intended for the other lemurs in her room. This worked for a while
- until something happened to loosen the collar a little bit and she
- was able to get at the food if she leaned over just right and
- thereby avoided making contact with the electrode in the collar
- that delivered the shocks. She also worked out a method for
- dragging the tray of food for the other lemurs across the room to
- her and chowing down. Finally, a combination of the electric
- collar and firmly attaching the food tray for the other animals to
- the floor got her weight down to a normal range. Sadly, Sabina
- died while on loan to a zoo, apparently suffering a toxic reaction
- to something in the food or in her cage.
-
- Some of the ruffed lemurs, thought by some to be less intelligent
- than other lemurs, show unusual wit (or at least inventiveness) as
- well. A black and white ruffed from one of the large outside
- natural habitat enclosures, developed a fondness for the
- Scuppernong grapes which grew nearby -- unfortunately, on the other
- side of the electric fence that protects the lemurs from wandering
- humans and keeps the lemurs in their study area. The voltage isn't
- set high enough to kill or injure the lemurs, but is high enough
- that a normal lemur won't want to get a second shock after first
- trying to scale the fence. Not this lemur, though. She decided
- the grapes were worth it and would climb the fence, getting
- shocked, eat her fill of grapes on the other side, then return home
- to her enclosure, getting yet another shock in the process.
-
- Then there was the red-ruffed lemur which escaped and found its
- way to a golf course, ten miles away... Lemurs do occasionally
- escape from their enclosures and pens, sometimes as a result of
- doors accidentally being left open, and sometimes when they manage
- to burrow under the fence. Often, the lemurs can be bribed back
- into their enclosures or cages with raisins, which they adore, but
- when this has to be done, it necessitates a later feeding of
- raisins for no reason at all, lest the lemurs come to associate
- raisins with escaping or with getting imprisoned again. Sometimes
- the lemurs wander around the center's grounds for a few hours until
- they get hungry and turn up looking to get fed. All lemurs wear
- collars with unique combinations of colors and symbols (so they can
- be identified at a distance), and marked with the Primate Center's
- phone number so they can be reported in should they turn up lost
- and forlorn miles from home. A red-ruffed lemur made it as far as
- a golf course in the neighboring city of Hillsborough, over ten
- miles away. Fortunately, the people at the golf course saw the
- phone number on the lemur's collar and called the Primate Center to
- come get their "cat." There was no report on how well the lemur
- had done on the course that day, nor what handicap lemurs normally
- get when playing golf.
-
- ------------
-
- The final section of the FAQ is Part 7: Real Lemur Facts.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
- This section of the FAQ partially adapted from publications of DUPC.
- Revised April 5, 1993 by Joel Furr, jfurr@polaris.async.vt.edu
- Revised July 6, 1993 by Joel Furr, jfurr@polaris.async.vt.edu
- Revised August 10, 1994 by Joel Furr, jfurr@acpub.duke.edu
- Republished May 11, 2000 by Joel K. 'Jay' Furr, jfurr@furrs.org
-
-
-