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<document id="CCC38DBA65CE35E4F5436ACD4D3A99FC" ID-CLB-Dataset="79793" ID-DOI="10.5281/zenodo.6709103" ID-GBIF-Dataset="715ac68b-c7fd-4eac-9128-b57bfd6ecddf" ID-ISBN="978-84-96553-89-7" ID-Zenodo-Dep="6709103" IM.metadata_requiresApprovalFor="plazi" IM.taxonomicNames_requiresApprovalFor="plazi" checkinTime="1656002980909" checkinUser="jonas" docAuthor="Russell A. Mittermeier, Anthony B. Rylands &amp; Don E. Wilson" docDate="2013" docId="5D3287905C4BFFF4AEC4FD328F5AF9C3" docLanguage="en" docName="hbmw_3_Indriidae_0142.pdf.imf" docOrigin="Handbook of the Mammals of the World Volume 3 Primates, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions" docTitle="Propithecus edwardsi Grandidier 1871" docType="treatment" docVersion="9" lastPageNumber="172" masterDocId="A10BFFE85C42FFFDAE67FFDF8512FFEF" masterDocTitle="Indriidae" masterLastPageNumber="175" masterPageNumber="142" pageNumber="172" updateTime="1699350078407" updateUser="ExternalLinkService">
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<mods:title id="FC3CA2B22376BE8FEBB6580A91C6735C">Indriidae</mods:title>
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<mods:namePart id="B5E6415E06A6CDA0B779741E0D827A9A">Russell A. Mittermeier</mods:namePart>
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<mods:namePart id="2DCE7F8931701681D712B9ED56A55C38">Anthony B. Rylands</mods:namePart>
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<mods:namePart id="E4AEDB8420AFDCFB05A3660E07499250">Don E. Wilson</mods:namePart>
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<mods:publisher id="97D69B72442AEBED5C91CB06F64C6DFC">Lynx Edicions</mods:publisher>
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<mods:title id="766F11A0D8E795AF56F9C480CB78A942">Handbook of the Mammals of the World Volume 3 Primates</mods:title>
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<treatment id="5D3287905C4BFFF4AEC4FD328F5AF9C3" ID-DOI="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6708868" ID-GBIF-Taxon="196159541" ID-Zenodo-Dep="6708868" LSID="urn:lsid:plazi:treatment:5D3287905C4BFFF4AEC4FD328F5AF9C3" httpUri="http://treatment.plazi.org/id/5D3287905C4BFFF4AEC4FD328F5AF9C3" lastPageNumber="172" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
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<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4AEC4FD3285C8FCF4" blockId="9.[159,1201,749,874]" box="[163,218,749,795]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<heading id="8E6C81EA5C4BFFF4AEC4FD3285C8FCF4" box="[163,218,749,795]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<figureCitation id="4DA02A035C4BFFF4AEC4FD3285C8FCF4" box="[163,218,749,795]" captionStart="On" captionStartId="6.[80,110,3397,3422]" captionTargetBox="[16,2704,15,3633]" captionTargetPageId="5" captionText="On following pages: 12. Crowned Sifaka (Propithecus coronatus); 13. Coquerels Sifaka (Propithecus coquerell); 14. Tattersalls Sifaka (Propithecus tattersall); 15. Diademed Sifaka (Propithecus diadema); 16. Milne-Edwards's Sifaka (Propithecus edwardsi); 17. Silky Sifaka (Propithecus candidus); 18. Perriers Sifaka (Propithecus perrieri)." figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6709199" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/6709199/files/figure.png" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">16.</figureCitation>
</heading>
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<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C4BFFF4AE8CFD3287D7FCF4" box="[235,709,749,795]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" type="vernacular_names">
<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4AE8CFD3287D7FCF4" blockId="9.[159,1201,749,874]" box="[235,709,749,795]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<heading id="8E6C81EA5C4BFFF4AE8CFD3287D7FCF4" box="[235,709,749,795]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<vernacularName id="5B9846A85C4BFFF4AE8CFD3287D7FCF4" box="[235,709,749,795]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Milne-Edwardss Sifaka</vernacularName>
</heading>
</paragraph>
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<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C4BFFF4AC90FD32816FFCF4" box="[759,1149,749,795]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" type="nomenclature">
<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4AC90FD32816FFCF4" blockId="9.[159,1201,749,874]" box="[759,1149,749,795]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<heading id="8E6C81EA5C4BFFF4AC90FD32816FFCF4" box="[759,1149,749,795]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<taxonomicName id="129B4D055C4BFFF4AC90FD32816FFCF4" ID-CoL="789PY" authorityName="Grandidier" authorityYear="1871" box="[759,1149,749,795]" class="Mammalia" family="Indriidae" genus="Propithecus" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="edwardsi">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C4BFFF4AC90FD32816FFCF4" box="[759,1149,749,795]" italics="true" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Propithecus edwardsi</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
</heading>
</paragraph>
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<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C4BFFF4AEC7FCF287B1FC85" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" type="vernacular_names">
<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4AEC7FCF281A2FCAD" blockId="9.[159,1201,749,874]" box="[160,1200,813,834]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<heading id="8E6C81EA5C4BFFF4AEC7FCF281A2FCAD" box="[160,1200,813,834]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C4BFFF4AEC7FCF285FFFCAD" bold="true" box="[160,237,813,834]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">French:</emphasis>
<vernacularName id="5B9846A85C4BFFF4AE91FCF284FFFCAD" box="[246,493,813,834]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Sifaka de Milne-Edwards</vernacularName>
/
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C4BFFF4AC65FCF2874FFCAD" bold="true" box="[514,605,813,834]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">German:</emphasis>
<vernacularName id="5B9846A85C4BFFF4AC0FFCF2862DFCAD" box="[616,831,813,834]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Milne-Edwards-Sifaka</vernacularName>
/
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C4BFFF4AD33FCF286BDFCAD" bold="true" box="[852,943,813,834]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Spanish:</emphasis>
<vernacularName id="5B9846A85C4BFFF4ADDEFCF281A2FCAD" box="[953,1200,813,834]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Sifaca de Milne-Edwards</vernacularName>
</heading>
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<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4AEC7FC8A87B1FC85" blockId="9.[159,1201,749,874]" box="[160,675,853,874]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<heading id="8E6C81EA5C4BFFF4AEC7FC8A87B1FC85" box="[160,675,853,874]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C4BFFF4AEC7FC8A8484FC85" bold="true" box="[160,406,853,874]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Other common names:</emphasis>
<vernacularName id="5B9846A85C4BFFF4AFF8FC8A87B1FC85" box="[415,675,853,874]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Milne-Edwardss Simpona</vernacularName>
</heading>
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<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C4BFFF4AD60FC458669FC31" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" type="reference_group">
<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4AD60FC458669FC31" blockId="9.[775,1363,922,1345]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C4BFFF4AD60FC4586B0FC58" bold="true" box="[775,930,922,951]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Taxonomy.</emphasis>
<taxonomicName id="129B4D055C4BFFF4ADD4FC458664FC31" ID-CoL="789PY" authorityName="Grandidier" authorityYear="1871" class="Mammalia" family="Indriidae" genus="Propithecus" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" phylum="Chordata" rank="genus">Propithecus edwardsi Grandidier, 1871</taxonomicName>
,
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C4BFFF4ADE0FC628029FC31" box="[903,1339,957,990]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" type="materials_examined">
<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4ADE0FC628029FC31" blockId="9.[775,1363,922,1345]" box="[903,1339,957,990]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<materialsCitation id="65F33CDB5C4BFFF4ADE0FC628029FC31" ID-GBIF-Occurrence="3818561310" box="[903,1339,957,990]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Madagascar, west of Mananjary.</materialsCitation>
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C4BFFF4AD6FFC3B871FF9BA" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" type="discussion">
<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4AD6FFC3B871FF9BA" blockId="9.[775,1363,922,1345]" lastBlockId="9.[159,1364,1355,3467]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
There appears to be a clinal gradient between this species and
<taxonomicName id="129B4D055C4BFFF4AA30FBCF81FAFBC2" authorityName="Bennett" authorityYear="1832" box="[1111,1256,1040,1069]" class="Mammalia" family="Indriidae" genus="Propithecus" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="diadema">P. diadema</taxonomicName>
. There are apparent intermediates between
<taxonomicName id="129B4D055C4BFFF4AB76FBE7864EFB93" authorityName="Bennett" authorityYear="1832" class="Mammalia" family="Indriidae" genus="Propithecus" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="diadema">P. diadema</taxonomicName>
and P. edwards: at AnosibenIfody on the left bank of the upper Mangoro River, whereas typical P. edwards: occurs further south along this river where it turns east toward the sea. The melanistic variant (holomelas), long recognized as a subspecies of
<taxonomicName id="129B4D055C4BFFF4AF0FFA9484EAFA87" authorityName="Bennett" authorityYear="1832" box="[360,504,1355,1384]" class="Mammalia" family="Indriidae" genus="Propithecus" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="diadema">P. diadema</taxonomicName>
, is now generally considered synonymous with this species. Almost entirely black except for a dark brown patch at the base of the tail, and perhaps slightly smaller in size on average than typical P. edwards, it was formerly found in the forests of Nandihizana, apparently in groups of normally colored
<taxonomicName id="129B4D055C4BFFF4AA36FA6281F1FA31" authorityName="Grandidier" authorityYear="1871" box="[1105,1251,1469,1502]" class="Mammalia" family="Indriidae" genus="Propithecus" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="edwardsi">P. edwardsi</taxonomicName>
. Unfortunately, sifakas are now gone from this region, and no similarly colored animals have been found elsewhere, making it difficult to determine whether or not it was indeed a distinct taxon. Monotypic.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C4BFFF4AEC7F98081EBF91D" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" type="distribution">
<caption id="81E4660E5C4BFFF4AEC7F98081EBF91D" ID-DOI="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6709163" ID-Zenodo-Dep="6709163" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/6709163/files/figure.png" inLine="true" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" targetBox="[163,743,931,1337]" targetPageId="9">
<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4AEC7F98081EBF91D" blockId="9.[159,1364,1355,3467]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C4BFFF4AEC7F9808442F993" bold="true" box="[160,336,1631,1660]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Distribution.</emphasis>
CE Madagascar, the Mangoro and Onive rivers are the N limits of the present range, and the Rienana River in Andringitra National Park is the S boundary. The former distribution probably extended somewhat N and further S to the Manampatrana River, but populations in those regions appear to have been extirpated.
</paragraph>
</caption>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C4BFFF4AEC7F9278491F7BB" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" type="description">
<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4AEC7F9278491F7BB" blockId="9.[159,1364,1355,3467]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C4BFFF4AEC7F9278485F8F6" bold="true" box="[160,407,1784,1817]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Descriptive notes.</emphasis>
Head-body 42-52 cm,tail 41-48 cm; weight 5-5 kg. Milne-Edwardss Sifaka is a large, heavily built species of
<taxonomicName id="129B4D055C4BFFF4ACA8F8F88672F8AF" authorityName="Bennett" authorityYear="1832" box="[719,864,1831,1856]" class="Mammalia" family="Indriidae" genus="Propithecus" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" phylum="Chordata" rank="genus">Propithecus</taxonomicName>
. The dorsal coat is dense and dark, varying from chocolate-brown to almostjet-black on the head, upper body, limbs, and tail. Bilateral whitish patches of varying extent grade into the darker surrounding fur on the back and flanks, sometimes meeting along the spine. The ventral coat is equally dark, sometimes paler around the upper part of the chest, but itis less dense than the dorsal coat. The face and ears are bare, and the skin is dark gray to black, with the ears barely discernible above the dark fur of the head. Eyes are orange-red. Juveniles resemble adults.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C4BFFF4AEC6F78584D0F74C" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" type="biology_ecology">
<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4AEC6F78584D0F74C" blockId="9.[159,1364,1355,3467]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C4BFFF4AEC6F7858402F794" bold="true" box="[161,272,2138,2171]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Habitat.</emphasis>
Primary and slightly degraded secondary rainforest at middle to high elevations of 600-1600 m.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C4BFFF4AEC6F77384C0F688" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" type="food_feeding">
<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4AEC6F77384C0F688" blockId="9.[159,1364,1355,3467]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C4BFFF4AEC6F77384B6F726" bold="true" box="[161,420,2220,2249]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Food and Feeding.</emphasis>
Diets of Milne-Edwardss Sifaka consist mainly of young leaves, ripe fruits, seeds, and flowers, but they also eat some mature leaves, bark, subterranean fungus, and soil. About a dozen different plant species are sampled each day. Dietary composition appears to vary significantly, however, not only from month to month but also from year to year.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C4BFFF4AEC6F6B2873AF264" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" type="breeding">
<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4AEC6F6B2873AF264" blockId="9.[159,1364,1355,3467]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C4BFFF4AEC6F6B28439F661" bold="true" box="[161,299,2413,2446]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Breeding.</emphasis>
Copulations of Milne-Edwardss Sifaka only occur over a single 24hour period when the female is in estrus and fertile, but females within a group are fertile on different days. Fertility is signaled by about a ten-hour long, externally visible pink genital swelling. Males testicles enlarge as the breeding season nears. Copulation is brief (often only 30-90 seconds) and consists of a single mount. A single young is born in June-July, after about a six-month gestation (average 179 days). Births in a group tend to be synchronous, with six of eight births in one study occurring during just one week. Average birth weight is 156 g. Infants transfer from their mothers belly to her back after about 3-4 weeks, riding comfortably there at about two months of age. At night, mothers continue to sleep with their offspring until they are about two years old. Allogrooming and self-grooming commence in the fourth week of life. Play starts by week six and most often occurs between the infant and a juvenile. The infant spends more time on its mother than on any other group member, and the mother is the main care provider. By one year, juveniles weigh 2-5 kg. Predation, especially by the Fosa (Cryptoprocta ferox), is a significant cause of death in infants. Infant mortality is high, with over one-half of female infants dying in their first year of life and only one-quarter surviving to reproductive age. Infanticide has been well documented in Milne-Edwardss Sifaka, particularly by unrelated adult male sifakas, which may serve as a male strategy to induce heat in females and shorten the interbirth interval from c.1-5 years (typical of mothers with infants surviving one year). Mothers wean their offspring six months after birth, which corresponds to just slightly before the subsequent breeding season. Age at first birth for females is about four years old, with an increase in fertility at six years. Males reach reproductive maturity at five years. About one-half of male and female Milne-Edwardss Sifakas emigrate from their natal group, with females leaving before maturity and males both before and after maturity. One individual reached an age of 27 years.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C4BFFF4ABF2FEFC82DFFE88" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" type="activity">
<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4ABF2FEFC82DFFE88" blockId="9.[1429,2637,291,1582]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C4BFFF4ABF2FEFC8392FEAF" bold="true" box="[1429,1664,291,320]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Activity patterns.</emphasis>
There is no specific information available for this species, but Milne-Edwards's Sifaka is diurnal and arboreal.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C4BFFF4ABF0FEB28215FCF6" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" type="biology_ecology">
<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4ABF0FEB28215FCF6" blockId="9.[1429,2637,291,1582]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C4BFFF4ABF0FEB28D7BFE61" bold="true" box="[1431,2153,365,398]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Movements, Home range and Social organization.</emphasis>
Field studies of Milne-Edwardss Sifakas have been carried out at Ranomafana National Park. It lives in multimale— multifemale groups of 3-9 individuals, typically containing 1-3 adult females and 1-2 adult males, and only one breeding pair. Females are dominant to males. Home range size is 40-250 ha. Exclusive territories are maintained, although there is little aggression over boundaries. Mean daily path of movement averages 670 m. Males emigrate at age five to a neighboring group; females may either emigrate or remain in their natal group. Milne-Edwardss Sifaka populations can have polygynous, polygynandrous, polyandrous, and monogamous mating systems. Density at Ranomafana is relatively low at 7-6 ind/km?, with densities in healthy populations south of the park reportedly even lower at ¢.3 ind/km?.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C4BFFF4ABFFFCFC8C28FB26" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" type="conservation">
<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4ABFFFCFC8C28FB26" blockId="9.[1429,2637,291,1582]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C4BFFF4ABFFFCFC83EAFCAF" bold="true" box="[1432,1784,803,832]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Status and Conservation.</emphasis>
CITES Appendix I. Classified as Endangered on The IUCN Red List. However, at the IUCN/SSC Lemur Red-Listing Workshop in July 2012, P. edwards: was assessed as critically endangered. Habitat destruction for slash-and-burn agriculture, logging, and gold mining are the main threats to Milne-Edwardss Sifakas. These activities sometimes take place even in protected areas. Hunting is also a problem, with shotguns, blowguns, and slingshots used as the primary weapons. Milne-Edwardss Sifaka occurs in two national parks (Andringitra and Ranomafana), and it also may be found in Andohahela National Park and Pic dIvohibe Special Reserve. There are populations in the unprotected forests north of Ranomafana and a number of unsurveyed forest reserves in eastern Fianarantsoa Province. The total world population is estimated at 9000 individuals, with ¢.4500 in Ranomafana.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C4BFFF4ABFEFB078F5AF9C3" pageId="9" pageNumber="172" type="bibRefCitation_list">
<paragraph id="D52436865C4BFFF4ABFEFB078F5AF9C3" blockId="9.[1429,2637,291,1582]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C4BFFF4ABFEFB078321FB1E" bold="true" box="[1433,1587,1240,1265]" pageId="9" pageNumber="172">Bibliography.</emphasis>
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</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
</treatment>
</document>