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The Indri
•Largest living lemur – an extinct lemur species was
the size of a gorilla
•Adults weigh 6 – 9.5 kg, and they are the only lemur without a tail
•Lives in family groups – pair and their infant; pair for life with one infant born every 2 – 3
years from the age of about 8
•Strict vegetarians, they require over 40 types of forest plants
•Can leap up to 10 m between tree trunks
•Call every morning to
other groups in the area, a haunting howling sound that can carry
for 4 km. The pair synchronise their
calling, and sing duets for up to 3
minutes at a time
•Lives only in eastern rainforests in
Madagascar
•Cannot survive in captivity
•Severely endangered as its habitat is
being lost
Baobab trees
•1 Genus - 8 species globally, 6 endemic to Madagascar, one in Australia, one in Africa–
distribution demonstrates continental drift
•Live in forests – when found isolated, as
in Avenue of the Baobabs, the forest has been
removed
•Trees can store thousands of litres of water (up to 120,000 l), making them well adapted
to draught conditions
•Wood is fibrous and of no
use for firewood or building, bark can be used for roofing,
clothing and rope, harvested relatively sustainably (though tree is damaged)
•Provide food and homes for many species of animals and plants
•Some subspecies are critically endangered as there is no natural regeneration –
pollinators
or seed dispersers no
longer exist
•Trees are long-lived, hundreds
of years at least. Radiocarbon
dating has aged an African
baobab at 1275 years, but some
may be much older
•They are the oldest known
flowering tree