AUTHOR=Guevara Elaine E. , Greene Lydia K. , Blanco Marina B. , Farmer Casey , Ranaivonasy Jeannin , Ratsirarson Joelisoa , Mahefarisoa Karine L. , Rajaonarivelo Tsiky , Rakotondrainibe Hajanirina H. , Junge Randall E. , Williams Cathy V. , Rambeloson Elodi , Rasoanaivo Hoby A. , Rahalinarivo Vololonirina , Andrianandrianina Laza H. , Clayton Jonathan B. , Rothman Ryan S. , Lawler Richard R. , Bradley Brenda J. , Yoder Anne D. TITLE=Molecular Adaptation to Folivory and the Conservation Implications for Madagascar’s Lemurs JOURNAL=Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution VOLUME=9 YEAR=2021 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/ecology-and-evolution/articles/10.3389/fevo.2021.736741 DOI=10.3389/fevo.2021.736741 ISSN=2296-701X ABSTRACT=
The lemurs of Madagascar include numerous species characterized by folivory across several families. Many extant lemuriform folivores exist in sympatry in Madagascar’s remaining forests. These species avoid feeding competition by adopting different dietary strategies within folivory, reflected in behavioral, morphological, and microbiota diversity across species. These conditions make lemurs an ideal study system for understanding adaptation to leaf-eating. Most folivorous lemurs are also highly endangered. The significance of folivory for conservation outlook is complex. Though generalist folivores may be relatively well equipped to survive habitat disturbance, specialist folivores occupying narrow dietary niches may be less resilient. Characterizing the genetic bases of adaptation to folivory across species and lineages can provide insights into their differential physiology and potential to resist habitat change. We recently reported accelerated genetic change in