“…This group of strepsirrhines includes either strictly or mainly arboreal species, which makes them particularly vulnerable to habitat loss and fragmentation in a country where around half of the remaining forest (46%) is <100 m away from its edge (Vieilledent et al, 2018). Over the last two decades, numerous studies have demonstrated the impact of habitat fragmentation on lemur species richness at the landscape level (Dunham, Erhart, Overdorff, & Wright, 2008; Ganzhorn & Eisenbeiß, 2001; Steffens & Lehman, 2018), their behavioral and ecological response within and between fragments (Campera et al, 2014; Donati et al, 2011; Eppley et al, 2017; Gould & Gabriel, 2015; Irwin, 2008; Irwin, Raharison, Raubenheimer, Chapman, & Rothman, 2015; Lehman, Rajaonson, & Day, 2006), and the genetic consequences of habitat fragmentation on their populations (Bertoncini et al, 2017; Quéméré, Amelot, Pierson, Crouau‐Roy, & Chikhi, 2012; Radespiel, Rakotondravony, & Chikhi, 2008; Sgarlata et al, 2018). Despite an overall negative effect of fragmentation on lemur persistence, several species have been shown to tolerate some levels of habitat degradation via shifts in activity patterns and in dietary choices (Donati et al, 2016; Irwin et al, 2010; Sato et al, 2016).…”