3 results match your criteria: "housed by the University of Utah[Affiliation]"

Madagascar's ring-tailed lemurs () are experiencing rapid population declines due to ongoing habitat loss and fragmentation, as well as increasing exploitation for bushmeat and the illegal pet trade. Despite being the focus of extensive and ongoing behavioral studies, there is comparatively little known about the genetic population structuring of the species. Here, we present the most comprehensive population genetic analysis of ring-tailed lemurs to date from across their likely remaining geographic range.

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Primates are extracted from the wild for the pet trade across the world. In Madagascar, lemurs are kept as illegal pets and an understanding of lemur pet ownership at the national level is lacking. In 2013 and 2016, we undertook a national survey in 11 of Madagascar's 22 administrative regions (n = 28 towns) with 1,709 households.

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A viral video and pet lemurs on Twitter.

PLoS One

September 2019

Pet Lemur Survey Initiative, housed by the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States of America.

Content shared on social media platforms can impact public perceptions of wildlife. These perceptions, which are in part shaped by context (e.g.

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