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<document id="CCB39D2B44DAB20097944E40BB908A01" 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="5D3287905C44FFFBAE33FE71822CF9A2" 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 verreauxi Grandidier 1867" docType="treatment" docVersion="9" lastPageNumber="169" masterDocId="A10BFFE85C42FFFDAE67FFDF8512FFEF" masterDocTitle="Indriidae" masterLastPageNumber="175" masterPageNumber="142" pageNumber="169" updateTime="1699350078407" updateUser="ExternalLinkService">
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<mods:title id="4D92A724F3679107B3695F8C655AF446">Indriidae</mods:title>
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<mods:namePart id="1696D111C521634D70177BA6BE174B33">Russell A. Mittermeier</mods:namePart>
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<mods:namePart id="301105050F702C6C6016A7A4646D130A">Anthony B. Rylands</mods:namePart>
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<mods:namePart id="5BA76495D8072F17C8615FFDD36A38B1">Don E. Wilson</mods:namePart>
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<mods:publisher id="419719E6E83B117DF31C424E507F0DCC">Lynx Edicions</mods:publisher>
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<mods:title id="B106C37C58F040E97745096036F03E21">Handbook of the Mammals of the World Volume 3 Primates</mods:title>
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<treatment id="5D3287905C44FFFBAE33FE71822CF9A2" ID-DOI="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6708832" ID-GBIF-Taxon="196159547" ID-Zenodo-Dep="6708832" LSID="urn:lsid:plazi:treatment:5D3287905C44FFFBAE33FE71822CF9A2" httpUri="http://treatment.plazi.org/id/5D3287905C44FFFBAE33FE71822CF9A2" lastPageNumber="169" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C44FFFBAE33FE718598FE37" box="[84,138,430,472]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" type="multiple">
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBAE33FE718598FE37" blockId="6.[79,962,430,553]" box="[84,138,430,472]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<heading id="8E6C81EA5C44FFFBAE33FE718598FE37" box="[84,138,430,472]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<figureCitation id="4DA02A035C44FFFBAE33FE718598FE37" box="[84,138,430,472]" 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="6" pageNumber="169">10.</figureCitation>
</heading>
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C44FFFBAEFEFE7184EDFE37" box="[153,511,430,472]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" type="vernacular_names">
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBAEFEFE7184EDFE37" blockId="6.[79,962,430,553]" box="[153,511,430,472]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<heading id="8E6C81EA5C44FFFBAEFEFE7184EDFE37" box="[153,511,430,472]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<vernacularName id="5B9846A85C44FFFBAEFEFE7184EDFE37" box="[153,511,430,472]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Verreauxs Sitaka</vernacularName>
</heading>
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C44FFFBAC57FE7186D3FE37" box="[560,961,430,472]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" type="nomenclature">
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBAC57FE7186D3FE37" blockId="6.[79,962,430,553]" box="[560,961,430,472]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<heading id="8E6C81EA5C44FFFBAC57FE7186D3FE37" box="[560,961,430,472]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<taxonomicName id="129B4D055C44FFFBAC57FE7186D3FE37" ID-CoL="77XPX" authorityName="Grandidier" authorityYear="1867" box="[560,961,430,472]" class="Mammalia" family="Indriidae" genus="Propithecus" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="verreauxi">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C44FFFBAC57FE7186D3FE37" box="[560,961,430,472]" italics="true" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Propithecus verreauxi</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
</heading>
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C44FFFBAE36FE3484DEFDC7" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" type="vernacular_names">
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBAE36FE34869CFDEF" blockId="6.[79,962,430,553]" box="[81,910,491,512]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<heading id="8E6C81EA5C44FFFBAE36FE34869CFDEF" box="[81,910,491,512]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C44FFFBAE36FE34858CFDEF" bold="true" box="[81,158,491,512]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">French:</emphasis>
<vernacularName id="5B9846A85C44FFFBAEC0FE348472FDEF" box="[167,352,491,512]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Sifaka de Verreaux</vernacularName>
/
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C44FFFBAF13FE3484DDFDEF" bold="true" box="[372,463,491,512]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">German:</emphasis>
<vernacularName id="5B9846A85C44FFFBAFBEFE348749FDEF" box="[473,603,491,512]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Kappensifaka</vernacularName>
/
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C44FFFBAC16FE3487DEFDEF" bold="true" box="[625,716,491,512]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Spanish:</emphasis>
<vernacularName id="5B9846A85C44FFFBACB2FE34869CFDEF" box="[725,910,491,512]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Sifaca de Verreaux</vernacularName>
</heading>
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBAE37FDCC84DEFDC7" blockId="6.[79,962,430,553]" box="[80,460,531,552]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<heading id="8E6C81EA5C44FFFBAE37FDCC84DEFDC7" box="[80,460,531,552]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C44FFFBAE37FDCC8454FDC7" bold="true" box="[80,326,531,552]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Other common names:</emphasis>
<vernacularName id="5B9846A85C44FFFBAF28FDCC84DEFDC7" box="[335,460,531,552]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">White Sifaka</vernacularName>
</heading>
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C44FFFBACD0FD878639FD73" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" type="reference_group">
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBACD0FD878639FD73" blockId="6.[694,1282,600,1022]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C44FFFBACD0FD878640FD9A" bold="true" box="[695,850,600,629]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Taxonomy.</emphasis>
<taxonomicName id="129B4D055C44FFFBAD07FD878634FD73" ID-CoL="77XPX" authorityName="Grandidier" authorityYear="1867" class="Mammalia" family="Indriidae" genus="Propithecus" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="verreauxi">Propithecus verreaux: Grandidier, 1867</taxonomicName>
,
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C44FFFBAD51FDA4866EFD2C" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" type="materials_examined">
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBAD51FDA4866EFD2C" blockId="6.[694,1282,600,1022]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<materialsCitation id="65F33CDB5C44FFFBAD51FDA4866EFD2C" ID-GBIF-Occurrence="3818561317" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Madagascar, Tsifanihy (N. of Cap Sainte-Marie).</materialsCitation>
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C44FFFBACD1FD128137FC67" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" type="discussion">
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBACD1FD128137FC67" blockId="6.[694,1282,600,1022]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">A distinctive color variant was described as a subspecies and given the name major: by W. Rothschild in 1894, but most experts now consider it a melanistic form of Verreauxs Sifaka. Monotypic.</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C44FFFBACD0FC51862DFB9B" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" type="distribution">
<caption id="81E4660E5C44FFFBACD0FC51862DFB9B" ID-DOI="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6709141" ID-Zenodo-Dep="6709141" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/6709141/files/figure.png" inLine="true" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" targetBox="[83,663,611,1017]" targetPageId="6">
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBACD0FC51862DFB9B" blockId="6.[694,1282,600,1022]" lastBlockId="6.[77,1284,1032,3302]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C44FFFBACD0FC518675FC40" bold="true" box="[695,871,910,943]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Distribution.</emphasis>
SW &amp; S Madagascar, in the W up to the Tsiribihina River, in the SE it is found near to (just N of) Tolagnaro (= Fort-Dauphin) in the Nahampoana Reserve, although it was probably introduced there; the distributional limit in the SE is the transitional and spiny forest patches of the Mangatsiaka Parcel of Andohahela National Park.
</paragraph>
</caption>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C44FFFBAE28FBA5879CF8D7" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" type="description">
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBAE28FBA5879CF8D7" blockId="6.[77,1284,1032,3302]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C44FFFBAE28FBA5845BFB74" bold="true" box="[79,329,1146,1179]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Descriptive notes.</emphasis>
Head-body 40-48 cm, tail 50-60 cm; weight 2-9 kg. Verreauxs Sifaka is one of the smaller species of
<taxonomicName id="129B4D055C44FFFBAC31FB7D87F5FB2C" authorityName="Bennett" authorityYear="1832" box="[598,743,1186,1219]" class="Mammalia" family="Indriidae" genus="Propithecus" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" phylum="Chordata" rank="genus">Propithecus</taxonomicName>
. Its pelage is long and thick, with the predominant coat color, including the tail, being generally a lustrous white, often with a silvery or golden tint on the back and flanks. This contrasts sharply with the black face, muzzle, hands, and feet. It also contrasts with the dark reddish-brown, chocolatebrown, or black crown that extends down the nape of the neck in both sexes. The underside is sparsely furred, exposing the dark skin of the belly and giving the abdomen a grayish appearance. The snout is deep and narrow, and ears are slightly tufted with white. Males have a reddish-brown patch on the upper chest that is associated with a sternal gland, visible at the base of the throat. Juveniles are entirely white except for a dark brown spot on the crown and occasionally a rufous wash on the ventral side. A variant, originally considered a subspecies (majori), is also predominantly white, including its cheeks, ears, and forehead, but it has a chocolate-brown head cap and is brownish to brownish-black on the chest, back, inside of the limbs, and tail, except for its white tip. This variant is almost always found in groups of normally colored Verreauxs Sifakas. Entirely white individuals also are occasionally observed with normally colored animals (e.g. in Berenty Reserve), and other variants may perhaps have maroon patches on the back, belly, or limbs.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C44FFFBAE29F8E18640F841" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" type="biology_ecology">
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBAE29F8E18640F841" blockId="6.[77,1284,1032,3302]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C44FFFBAE29F8E185AFF8B0" bold="true" box="[78,189,1854,1887]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Habitat.</emphasis>
Typically tropical dry lowland and montane forest from sea level to elevations of 1300 m; also semi-arid spiny bush, brush-and-scrub thickets, deciduous gallery forest, riparian forest, and humid forests at low elevations.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C44FFFBAE29F86B842CF6FF" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" type="food_feeding">
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBAE29F86B842CF6FF" blockId="6.[77,1284,1032,3302]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C44FFFBAE29F86B8440F83A" bold="true" box="[78,338,1972,2005]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Food and Feeding.</emphasis>
Diets of Verreauxs Sifaka are seasonally variable but consist mainly of young leaves, fruits, and flowers, supplemented with seeds, bark, dead wood, and termite soil. Leaves are the most important food item during the dry season, and fruits are most important during the wet season when parts of fewer plant species are eaten. Most seeds eaten are destroyed, meaning that Verreauxs Sifaka is at least partly a seed predator. Survival of Verreauxs Sifaka in
<taxonomicName id="129B4D055C44FFFBACC0F7A6864CF775" box="[679,862,2169,2202]" class="Magnoliopsida" family="Didiereaceae" kingdom="Plantae" order="Caryophyllales" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="family">Didiereaceae</taxonomicName>
forest—including periods of severe drought—suggests that they do not need to drink. Water may be obtained indirectly during the dry season by eating bark and cambium of
<taxonomicName id="129B4D055C44FFFBAD88F717818EF706" box="[1007,1180,2248,2281]" class="Magnoliopsida" family="Anacardiaceae" genus="Operculicarya" kingdom="Plantae" order="Sapindales" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="genus">Operculicarya</taxonomicName>
decaryi (
<taxonomicName id="129B4D055C44FFFBAE3CF72C8422F6FF" box="[91,304,2291,2320]" class="Magnoliopsida" family="Anacardiaceae" kingdom="Plantae" order="Sapindales" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="family">Anacardiaceae</taxonomicName>
).
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C44FFFBAE29F6C48603F4E0" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" type="breeding">
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBAE29F6C48603F4E0" blockId="6.[77,1284,1032,3302]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C44FFFBAE29F6C485C6F6D7" bold="true" box="[78,212,2331,2360]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Breeding.</emphasis>
Reproduction of Verreauxs Sifaka is seasonal and synchronized within groups and between them. Mating takes place in January-February. Females are receptive for only about a single day per year. A single dominant male monopolizes paternity in each group at Kirindy Forest, whereas paternity by extragroup males is common at Beza-Mahafaly Special Reserve. A single young is born in August-September after gestation of 162-170 days. The mothercarries her infant on her belly for the first three months, at which pointit shifts to her back. All group members interact with infants, with grooming, playing, carrying, and nursing being the most common alloparental behaviors. Infanticide has been reported. Young are almost completely independent at about six months. Age of sexual maturity varies by habitat; for example, in the spiny forests of Beza-Mahafaly, less than one-half of the females reproduced by six years of age, whereas three-year-old females at Berenty Reserve are routinely seen with newborns. Males are sexually mature at c.2-5 years old.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C44FFFBAE2AF4CA86D7F43B" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" type="activity">
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBAE2AF4CA86D7F43B" blockId="6.[77,1284,1032,3302]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C44FFFBAE2AF4CA8424F4D9" bold="true" box="[77,310,2837,2870]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Activity patterns.</emphasis>
Verreauxs Sifakas are diurnal and mainly arboreal. They have the extraordinary ability to leap from one cactus-like
<taxonomicName id="129B4D055C44FFFBAC85F49E868AF4B1" box="[738,920,2881,2910]" class="Magnoliopsida" family="Didiereaceae" kingdom="Plantae" order="Caryophyllales" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="family">Didiereaceae</taxonomicName>
trunk to another—somehow managing to avoid the very hard, sharp spines of these tall, thin plants. Individuals regularly descend to the ground, where they proceed by a series of upright, usually slightly sideways, bipedal hops with arms raised above the head.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C44FFFBAE28F4058D08FE8E" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" type="biology_ecology">
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBAE28F4058D08FE8E" blockId="6.[77,1284,1032,3302]" lastBlockId="6.[1350,2558,288,1616]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C44FFFBAE28F4058608F414" bold="true" box="[79,794,3034,3067]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Movements, Home range and Social organization.</emphasis>
Verreauxs Sifakas tend to live in small to medium-sized, multimale-multifemale groups of 2-14 individuals (average 5-6). There are usually more males in a group than females. Home ranges may exceed 10 ha but are often much smaller. Rather than strict territorial boundaries, core areas and food resources of overlapping home ranges are defended against neighboring groups. Females appear to be dominant over males. Males fight with one another for dominance only during the mating season. Males disperse. Reported densities include 47 ind/km? in the degraded forests of Belaoka Marovato, 150-200 ind/km®at Berenty Reserve, and 400-500 ind/km?® at Antserananomby.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C44FFFBAB2EFEB3823EFBA2" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" type="conservation">
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBAB2EFEB3823EFBA2" blockId="6.[1350,2558,288,1616]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C44FFFBAB2EFEB383B6FE66" bold="true" box="[1353,1700,364,393]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Status and Conservation.</emphasis>
CITES Appendix I. Classified as Vulnerable on The IUCN Red List. However, at the IUCN/SSC Lemur Red-Listing Workshop in July 2012,
<taxonomicName id="129B4D055C44FFFBA700FE508CEFFE5F" authorityName="Grandidier" authorityYear="1867" box="[2407,2557,399,432]" class="Mammalia" family="Indriidae" genus="Propithecus" kingdom="Animalia" order="Primates" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="verreauxi">P. verreauxi</taxonomicName>
was assessed as endangered. Despite the large distribution of Verreauxs Sifaka, the two principal habitats upon which it depends for survival—spiny forest and riparian or gallery forest—are under continual threat because of logging, slash-and-burn agriculture (especially for corn plantations), and charcoal and firewood collection. Although hunting is illegal and “fady” (taboo) to several ofthe tribes living within its distribution (e.g. Antandroy and Mahafaly), it is hunted for food by othertribes (e.g. Sakalava) and immigrants to the region. In the Isalo region, Verreauxs Sifaka is known as “sifaka-bilany” (sifaka of the cooking pot), butitis unclear whetherthisis because ofits popularity as a food item or because of the sooty black appearance of individuals from this part of its range. It occurs in four national parks (Andohahela, Isalo, Tsimanampetsotsa, and Zombitse-Vohibasia), two special reserves (Andranomena and Beza-Mahafaly), and two private reserves (Analabe and Berenty Reserve). Populations of the Verreauxs Sifaka also are found in the Kirindy Forest (part of the Menabe-Antimena Protected Area) and a number of unprotected classified forests and forest reserves. Significant variation in densities has been noted in different forest types; in general, densities are lower in areas of degraded habitat but even very small forest patches can support sizeable numbers of Verreauxs Sifaka.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="9D81650D5C44FFFBAB2EFBBE822CF9A2" pageId="6" pageNumber="169" type="bibRefCitation_list">
<paragraph id="D52436865C44FFFBAB2EFBBE822CF9A2" blockId="6.[1350,2558,288,1616]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">
<emphasis id="E7EFEA945C44FFFBAB2EFBBE80F1FB99" bold="true" box="[1353,1507,1121,1142]" pageId="6" pageNumber="169">Bibliography.</emphasis>
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</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
</treatment>
</document>