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  Lemur Stock Footage

There are 4 stock footage source matches for 'Lemur'.
Ringtailed Lemur
Ringtailed Lemur
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More About Lemurs ...
Lemurs are part of a class of primates known as prosimians, and make up the infraorder Lemuriformes. These animals are the evolutionary predecessors of monkeys and apes (simians). The term "lemur" is derived from the Latin word lemures, which means "spirits of the night". This likely refers to many lemurs' nocturnal behavior and their large, reflective eyes. It is generically used for four families of prosimians:

Cheirogaleidae, the mouse-lemurs and dwarf lemurs
Lemuridae, common lemurs
Megaladapidae, sportive lemurs
Indridae, leaping lemurs
Lemurs are found naturally only on the island of Madagascar, and some smaller surrounding islands, including the Comoros (where it is likely they were introduced by humans). While they were displaced in the rest of the world by monkeys, apes, and other primates, the lemurs were safe from competition on Madagascar and differentiated into a number of species. These range in size from about 30 grams to perhaps as large as 200 kilograms. The larger species have all become extinct since humans settled on Madagascar, and since the early 20th century the largest lemurs reach about 7 kilograms. Typically, the smaller lemurs are active at night (nocturnal), while the larger ones are active during the day (diurnal).

All lemurs are endangered species, due mainly to habitat destruction (deforestation) and hunting. Although conservation efforts are under way, options are limited because of the lemurs' limited range and because Madagascar is desperately poor. Currently, there are approximately 32 living lemur species.
Taxonmony
Phylum: Chordata
Class: mammalia
Order: Primates
Family:
Source: Wikipedia Read more about Lemurs
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Ringtail Lemur
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Ring-tailed lemur
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Ring-tailed lemurs hail from southern and southwestern Madagascar. But the ones on this compilation happen to reside in the zoo in Stockholm. Lots of lemurs doing all sort of lemur-like things, in groups of three to eight.

The footage on Lemurs of Madagascar is shot with a 3CCD camcorder and is supplied in flattened QuickTime format. Time lengths range from 3 seconds up to 8 seconds and 4.3 MB to 48.8 MB file size. It is shot and captured in DV-PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps. Visit Site
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