“…This is first because SIRNP contains two remaining forests: the 1169 Ha Anabohazo forest, a continuous forest block that has undergone very little anthropogenic disturbance (Randriatahina et al, 2014), and the 976 Ha Ankarafa forest, a highly fragmented forest encompassed of many fragments of varying size, levels of degradation, and anthropogenic disturbance (Seiler, Holderied, et al, 2013a). Second, analyses of tree species diversity, tree size, and structural diversity (Hending, Randrianarison, Andriamavosoloarisoa, Ranohatra‐Hending, Holderied, et al, 2023), and transects measuring the variation of microclimatic and abiotic variables (temperature, humidity, and light intensity) from the forest edge into the forest core (Mandl, 2018, unpublished thesis; Mandl et al, 2022) have already established the edge‐core gradient of SIRNP's forest as 165 m. The Anabohazo and Ankarafa forests are separated by only ~25 km of grassland, and this provides an opportunity to study the behavioral responses of a lemur community to forest fragmentation on a localized scale, where environmental and habitat‐related covariates can be easily controlled for, in comparison to other studies that have attempted to answer similar research questions over a much larger study area (e.g., Chaves et al, 2011; Cristóbal‐Azkarate & Arroyo‐Rodríguez, 2007).…”