“…In addition to sharp population declines and geographic range contractions (Ganzhorn et al, 2000; Hending, Sgarlata, et al, 2020), forest fragmentation has been observed to cause changes in the behavioral ecology of many lemur species (Seiler, 2012). As with other primate groups, the responses of lemurs to fragmentation are species‐specific (Steffens & Lehman, 2018) and some species have had to increase foraging effort (Dinsmore et al, 2016; Gabriel, 2013), alter their activity patterns (Donati et al, 2016; Schwitzer, Kaumanns, et al, 2007) and stray from their regular diet (Donati et al, 2020; Seiler et al, 2014) to survive within fragmented landscapes. Conversely, some species have demonstrated high adaptability to forest fragmentation and degradation (Hending, 2021), and behavioral flexibility and plasticity of both diet (Donati et al, 2011; Eppley et al, 2017; Irwin, 2006) and activity (Cameron & Gould, 2013; Seiler et al, 2014) have been observed in multiple lemur species.…”