2021
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2021.736741
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Molecular Adaptation to Folivory and the Conservation Implications for Madagascar’s Lemurs

Abstract: The lemurs of Madagascar include numerous species characterized by folivory across several families. Many extant lemuriform folivores exist in sympatry in Madagascar’s remaining forests. These species avoid feeding competition by adopting different dietary strategies within folivory, reflected in behavioral, morphological, and microbiota diversity across species. These conditions make lemurs an ideal study system for understanding adaptation to leaf-eating. Most folivorous lemurs are also highly endangered. Th… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…That Coquerel's sifakas intuitively “know” which plants are safe to eat in foreign forests seemingly depends on a suite of interconnected genetic, sensory, digestive, and microbial mechanisms. At the genetic level, sifaka genomes show deep‐rooted selection for numerous genes related to diet and folivory, including those involved in xenobiotic metabolism, nutrient absorption, and microbial nitrogen salvage (Guevara, Greene, et al, 2021; Guevara, Webster, et al, 2021). At the sensory level, sifakas use olfactory and visual cues to locate food items and to discriminate foods at different stages of maturity (Irwin, Jean‐Luc raharison, et al, 2007; Rushmore et al, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…That Coquerel's sifakas intuitively “know” which plants are safe to eat in foreign forests seemingly depends on a suite of interconnected genetic, sensory, digestive, and microbial mechanisms. At the genetic level, sifaka genomes show deep‐rooted selection for numerous genes related to diet and folivory, including those involved in xenobiotic metabolism, nutrient absorption, and microbial nitrogen salvage (Guevara, Greene, et al, 2021; Guevara, Webster, et al, 2021). At the sensory level, sifakas use olfactory and visual cues to locate food items and to discriminate foods at different stages of maturity (Irwin, Jean‐Luc raharison, et al, 2007; Rushmore et al, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%