The text of the entry was: Did you know ... that as recently as 500 years ago, the island of
Madagascar was inhabited by giant
lemurs, referred to as subfossil lemurs, that weighed between 10 and 200 kg (22 and 441 lb)?
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This article is a part of WikiProject Extinction, an attempt at creating a standardized, informative, comprehensive and easy-to-use resource on
extinction and extinct organisms. If you would like to participate, you can choose to edit this article, or visit the
project page for more information.ExtinctionWikipedia:WikiProject ExtinctionTemplate:WikiProject ExtinctionExtinction articles
This article has been rated as Mid-importance on the
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Article creation and upcoming expansion
Due to unintended delays, I decided to publish this article prematurely just to fill the unnecessary void. (Also, by putting it in the mainspace, maybe that will light a fire under my butt to finish it.) In its current "1.0" state, it could use a serious proofread and copy-edit. I will try to do that myself immediately following this post, but at some point I need to call it a night. In general, I prefer that others proofread my work anyway, since I'm not good at catching my own mistakes. A quick
class assessment would be greatly appreciated. Once the article is finished, I will obviously push it through
WP:GAC followed by
WP:FAC. Over the coming week or two, I plan to work on the article, hopefully finishing the last two sections. The "Extinction" section, in particular, is expected to grow significantly. Anyone looking at the source will see the hidden references I intend to use, so please do not delete them. Otherwise, enjoy the article and feel free to ask questions. – VisionHolder «
talk »04:53, 9 June 2010 (UTC)reply
I should also note that I am trying to avoid using any life restoration images that have not been approved by subfossil lemur expert, Dr. Laurie Godfrey. I have been working with her and two skill Wiki artists,
Smokeybjb and
FunkMonk, to create more. As additional "approved" images become available, they will be included on this page. – VisionHolder «
talk »05:41, 9 June 2010 (UTC)reply
Comments
Lead: "ranging as high as 20 or more species"—better to give the actual maximum
The lead should have something about the history of research (the proliferation of names and papers around 1900, the silence of subfossil lemur research after WW II, and recent renaissance), and about why they went extinct, but that should perhaps wait till the relevant sections have been written.
"
striped possums"—the link goes to the species Dactylopsila trivirgata and therefore should be capitalized, unless you actually mean the genus Dactylopsila.
The source just says "striped possums", so I'm not sure if it's just that species or the entire genus. The wiki articles on the other species are one-sentence stubs. – VisionHolder «
talk »20:51, 3 July 2010 (UTC)reply
"
gallery forests that surviving lemur species are most often studied in."—not "found in"?
The source says "studied in", meaning they lived in a wide array of habitats than the lemurs we've studied to date. Or I think that's what the source means. – VisionHolder «
talk »20:51, 3 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I looked at the source, and the relevance of the quote seems questionable: they're really saying that living lemurs occur in different habitats, and subfossil lemurs probably did too. Also, they're talking about the assemblage in a specific place, not about subfossil lemurs in general.
Ucucha19:27, 4 July 2010 (UTC)reply
"not all habitats in which they occurred would have allowed them to be strictly arboreal, including gallery forests and the
spiny forests of southern Madagascar."—not clear what the "including" refers to here.
"Yet despite this pressure to specialize and differentiate, some of the extinct subfossil lemurs, such as Archaeolemur, had island-wide distributions during the
Holocene, unlike the living lemurs"—wouldn't the appropriate comparison here be the genus for living lemurs? Various extant genera do have virtually island-wide distributions.
I'm going by the source. Unfortunately, I haven't made a range map for Archaeolemur yet, and I'm not sure how distributed the two species were. Today, though, I don't know of a single two-species genus that has an island-wide distribution, unless you count
sifakas as two species with many subspecies (like Tattersall does). – VisionHolder «
talk »20:51, 3 July 2010 (UTC)reply
"Subfossil lemur diets have been reconstructed using analytical tools, including
dental gross morphology,
shearing quotients,
microwear,
mesowear,
dental microstructure,
biogeochemistry, and the dissection of
fecal pellets associated with subfossil remains"—as I told you, I think you should explain what this all means. I'll say what I think they refer to, but am not familiar with all of them. "Dental gross morphology" is just the way the tooth generally look—crest arrangement etcetera. "Shearing quotients" might be something related to hypsodonty (high-crownedness). "Microwear" and "mesowear" look at the way the tooth is worn on a microscopic level; I'm not sure what the difference between the two is. "Dental microstructure" looks at the microscopic arrangement of the tooth enamel, with things like
Hunter-Schreger bands. "Biogeochemistry" may be isotopic analysis, like C-13 levels.
I've removed the list of dental terms and simplified, hiding the full text for now. Thanks for the suggestions, especially for "biogeochemistry." – VisionHolder «
talk »20:51, 3 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Given that the biogeochemistry is used to determine what types of plants the lemurs ate (by looking at isotope levels), I'm going to stick with your initial suggestion, if that's alright. – VisionHolder «
talk »21:53, 4 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I've got an introduction to mesowear and microwear from someone who does know about it. Microwear is looking at the occlusal surface of teeth under a microscope and noting the scratches and holes and little things in the surface. Mesowear looks at the sides of the teeth, at the cusp profiles. When an animal eats hard (abrasive) food, it gets blunt, low cusps, but when it eats soft food, it gets higher, sharper cusps.
Ucucha10:30, 9 June 2010 (UTC)reply
You link "niche differentiation" twice in the "Ecology" section, once piped to "resource partitioning".
The piece about seed dispersal makes me wonder how those plants that depended on subfossil lemurs survive now.
Nothing is said in the literature. One thing that is noted in the article is that genetic diversity of some species is narrowing regionally since seeds mostly just fall near the parent. In my personal opinion, I suspect other lemurs eat the fruits, but don't carry them as far. (Instead of carrying them in their gut, the carry the fruit in their mouth a short distance, eat the meat, and then drop the seed. Also, introduced animals may eat fallen fruit and humans may also act as dispersers to a limited extent. But, again, I haven't seen anything in the literature. – VisionHolder «
talk »20:51, 3 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Admittedly, I'm not familiar with the fruits of those specific species. If the seed has a mesocarp that the lemur will consume, they'll carry it. I don't know if some of those seed require passing through an animal's gut to germinate. A lot of times, it just helps with germination, but isn't a requirement. Maybe some species just require fire to germinate?? If I happen upon a source that answers these questions in more detail, I'll add it to the article. As it stands, the information that's included is only applicable to the arid southwest and not the entire island. – VisionHolder «
talk »22:00, 4 July 2010 (UTC)reply
"Most subfossil lemurs also had high
retinal summation (sensitivity to low light), resulting in poor day vision (low
visual acuity) compared to anthropoids."—what is the evidence for this?
Added. If I go into any more detail, I'm going to be explaining the OFI (the Optical Foramen Index) and lots of complicated ratios. I hope this is okay. – VisionHolder «
talk »22:17, 4 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I'm a little torn between addressing these and writing the rest of the article. At the moment, I think I'm going to work on writing more material and will come back later to address these issues. – VisionHolder «
talk »14:48, 12 June 2010 (UTC)reply
It took me a while, but I made some changes and wrote some replies. Don't bother with a new review yet until I'm done with the article... which hopefully will be Sunday or Monday. – VisionHolder «
talk »20:51, 3 July 2010 (UTC)reply
"one hundred-year-old calf" has been replaced by "two-year-old calf". Which makes more sense and also corresponds to the original French version : " «Trétrétrétré ou tratratratra, c'est un animal grand comme un veau de deux ans, qui a la teste ronde, et une face d'homme ; les pieds de devant comme un singe, et les pieds de derrière aussi. Il a le poil frisoté, la queue courte et les oreilles comme celles d'un homme. Il ressemble au tanacht d'escrit par Ambroise Paré. Il s'en est vu un proche l'estang de Lipomani aux environs duquel est son repaire. C'est un animal fort solitaire, les gens du païs en ont grand peur et s'enfuient de luy comme luy aussi d'eux.» (d'après Flacourt 1658) ". 09:55, 20 July 2023 (UTC) — Preceding
unsigned comment added by
176.152.85.92 (
talk)
Timeline
I finally finished writing the article, although I would still like to add a timeline based on "Table 1" from Burney 2004. I might try creating it as a SVG file sometime soon, although if someone is skilled at using
EasyTimeline, I would gladly explain what I would like to see. – VisionHolder «
talk »22:41, 4 July 2010 (UTC)reply
In the body, you do mention 500 BP, though, so perhaps this should be changed to "around 1450 CE" or something like that.
The source explicitly states: "Radiocarbon dates associated with extinct lemurs range from around 26,000 yr B.P. to around 500 yr B.P." Given the experience previous discussed between us, with Simons (one of the coauthors) confusing the definition of B.P., and given that I haven't heard back from Dr. Godfrey in half a week since I questioned her about this, I'm not sure if I feel comfortable deviating from the sources at this time. Ultimately, though, I do favor converting everything to CE... but not until I know how to interpret each source. – VisionHolder «
talk »06:22, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I understand. The problem is that the article is now contradicting itself, though: it says "500 years ago" in the lead and at one place in the body, but "500 years BP" somewhere else in the body.
Ucucha06:27, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I honestly don't know how to give you a satisfactory answer. Until the authors reply, which they may not, we're stuck guessing. The body cites the source verbatim for the dates. But you also think using "BP" in the lead is unnecessary. I've given an approximation instead, assuming the authors correctly used BP in the source (which I don't think Simons did). That's the best that I can think of. Any specific suggestions? – VisionHolder «
talk »19:49, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
"confused assemblages of bones"—does that refer to the misallocations of bones to the wrong animals? If so, it's not very clear.
Why does only one of the plant genera listed have its family given?
Actually, there were two: Cedrelopsis and Uncarina. The genera didn't have articles, so I provided a link to the families instead (so that people could at least find something about them). I've now created stubs for the species and removed the family links. – VisionHolder «
talk »00:06, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
"Since most giant subfossil lemurs have been shown to share the many of the unique traits of their living counterparts, and not those of
monkeys, the energy frugality hypothesis seems to best explain both living and extinct lemur adaptations."—might it be better to explicitly attribute this to the person who wrote it, to avoid the impression that it is Wikipedia that is choosing the best hypothesis?
"Dental wear analysis has shed little light on this dietary mystery, suggesting that monkey lemurs had a more eclectic diet, while using tough seeds as a fall-back food item."—this reads like it did shed light on the mystery.
Would it be good to include some of the other exotic early theories about subfossil lemurs? I recall some were also identified as apes.
I'll have to go back and review the literature. I thought I had covered the stories from Godfrey's sources, particularly the "aquatic Palaeopropithecus". Was there a specific source you had in mind? – VisionHolder «
talk »00:06, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Hadropithecus was thought to be an ape—it's in the article, but I may have put it in myself. Anyway, it's perhaps better not to mention all the weird theories in this summary article.
Ucucha05:57, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Let's save that for the genus article. I still need to clean that up, and I plan to run that through FAC soon. I'll be sure to mention it there. For now, I think the story of the "aquatic Palaeopropithecus" should tell enough about the confusion of the time for such a lengthy and general article. – VisionHolder «
talk »06:32, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
What is the seventeenth species (in addition to the fourteen identified around 1900 and the two explicitly mentioned in the "Research" section)?
"The subfossil sites are clustered together geographically and are recent in age, mostly dating between 2,500 and 1,000 years old, with a few spanning back to the last Ice Age, approximately 10,000 years ago."—that doesn't agree with the 26000 BP radiocarbon date on Megaladapis.
I'm not sure what those sources meant, and I wrote to Dr. Godfrey about it. I thought that maybe the 26000 BP radiocarbon date had been thrown out or something, but apparently it's still alive and well. I'm still pondering how best to handle this. – VisionHolder «
talk »00:06, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Never mind. I went back to the source and discovered I had misread it. The sentence should be clearer now, and inclusive of the 26,000 year date. – VisionHolder «
talk »00:12, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I don't understand the dating for the Palaeopropithecus bone with cut marks: 321 +/- 43 BCE would be 364–278 BCE, not 362–311.
I probably converted this incorrectly, but the source reads "2325 ± 43 B.P. (2366–2315 cal yr B.P.)". I have reinstated the exact wording from the article, though I cannot explain the mathematical discrepancy. It might have to do with one range being calibrated, and the other not?? – VisionHolder «
talk »00:06, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Dr. David Burney has replied and has promised to address these dating issues for me in a couple of days. Knowing how live goes for professors, I'm going to give him a couple of weeks. Either way, there is hope that we'll resolve these dating issues relatively soon. – VisionHolder «
talk »21:36, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
"As recently as the early 1600s, dwindling populations of subfossil lemurs may have persisted in coastal regions where tree-cutting and uncontrolled fires."—missing a verb.
I don't think a source from 1989 is ideal either for this kind of image, as much has been discovered since then. (Such as three new species of subfossil lemurs.)
Ucucha05:57, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I don't think the new species of subfossil lemur affect this illustration. In fact, I think the article mostly supports the Madagascar portion—a rapid die-off (followed by a slow recovery as new megafauna are introduced to the island). Again, tomorrow I'll email Martin and Burney and see what they have to say. As I said, I'll remove the illustration if needed. – VisionHolder «
talk »06:32, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Thanks for the thorough review! I'll try to take a look at things tomorrow and try to fix them up. A quick note about the graphics (last 2 comments): A "source" for
File:Extinctions Africa Austrailia NAmerica Madagascar.gif is given as "(after Martin, 1989)" under the "Summary" section. I've already tried emailing the file's creator to see if he could provide the data and full citation for the image so that I could recreate it as a SVG file, but haven't heard back yet. Are you heading to the library anytime soon? Maybe there's a table in there that you can copy ... if you don't mind. I assume the full citation is as follows:
Martin P. S. (1989). Prehistoric overkill: A global model. In Quaternary extinctions: A prehistoric revolution (ed. P.S. Martin and R.G. Klein). Tucson, AZ: Univ. Arizona Press. pp. 354–404. ISBN 0-8165-1100-4.
I'd noticed the "Martin, 1989" mention, but that's so vague that it can hardly be called a source. However, the citation you mention is plausible, and I'll take a look to see whether I can find the book.
The book is not in the library here, though it is supposed to be. I might ask a librarian when I get a chance, or find some other way to the chapter.
Ucucha15:41, 6 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I got a reply from the creator of the image, and I learned that he created it in Photoshop by duplicating an illustration he saw in the book. (I've asked for the page number and illustration number, but no reply yet.) I don't know how that kind of thing works in terms of copyrights. Anyway, he also gave me email addresses for Burney and Martin, so I may contact them and see if I can find what the illustration was based on. – VisionHolder «
talk »16:18, 6 July 2010 (UTC)reply
(butting in) - The diversity of subfossil lemur communities was higher than that of present-day lemur communities, ranging as high as 20 or more species, compared to 10 to 12 species today. - does this mean per ecosystem or locality?
Casliber (
talk·contribs)
20:17, 5 July 2010 (UTC)reply
As a group, the lemurs of Madagascar are extremely diverse, having evolved in isolation and radiated over the past 40 to 60 million years to fill many ecological niches normally occupied by other primates. - was it just primates or do they occupy any niches of, say, marsupials or rodents?
Casliber (
talk·contribs)
06:25, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I think the source was comparing lemurs to other primates, so they did not go into that. To make things simple, should I just remove "normally occupied by other primates"? Since it's a general statement about lemurs, the comparison (specifically) may not be appropriate for this article. – VisionHolder «
talk »20:21, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Hmmm, interesting. I am not a mammalologist so am a relative neophyte about furry critters. I am guessing they could occupy niches by non-primates elsewhere so I'm thinking it'd be a good idea not to assume they were primates if it isn't specified in the source. Ucucha may have an opinion on this.
Casliber (
talk·contribs)
20:38, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I think we should go with what the source says. In my opinion, claims like this are always somewhat arguable—niches in one place are rarely exactly the same as those in another. However, the nonvolant mammal fauna of Madagascar probably contains proportionally more primates than anywhere else (I don't have the numbers right now), which suggests that the lemurs do occupy a broader range of niches than primates in general do.
Ucucha06:33, 8 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I am now passing this article; all issues that are left are the doubtful datings that we can't do much about.
Ucucha06:36, 8 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Post-GA Pre-FAC
I must admit that I was struck by how hard it was to find things to improve as I read through. I think this one has gelled very well and is worth a whirl at FAC sooner rather than later.
Casliber (
talk·contribs)
07:29, 8 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Thanks for the review—both you and Ucucha! Do you guys recommend that I wait on fixing the dates with Burney before the FAC run, or should I go ahead and submit it? Either way, the dates will be fixed eventually. I would never leave the article unfinished. – VisionHolder «
talk »14:24, 8 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Given the lack of reply and encouragement to continue on, I am submitting the article for FAC. (Sorry if I seem impatient.) I will note the lingering issues, the problems with the cited sources (beyond our control), and my continued efforts to give correct details. – VisionHolder «
talk »03:31, 10 July 2010 (UTC)reply
No problem. I didn't reply because I wasn't quite sure what to advise, but it should be your choice.
Cas, in relation to your query above: I found some discussion of this in Carleton and Goodman (1998, in Fieldiana Zoology). Madagascar, they say, has few native rodents (nesomyines) relative to other tropical islands like Borneo and New Guinea, and this could be related to "niche saturation": tenrecs and lemurs, who arrived before the nesomyines, had already taken up some niches normally taken by rodents: cheirogaleid lemurs are comparable to small arboreal rodents; Microgale tenrecs to shrew-rats and shrew-mice like Pseudohydromys of New Guinea; and Limnogale, the water tenrec, to semiaquatic rodents like Hydromys of Australasia.
Ucucha08:23, 10 July 2010 (UTC)reply
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The text of the entry was: Did you know ... that as recently as 500 years ago, the island of
Madagascar was inhabited by giant
lemurs, referred to as subfossil lemurs, that weighed between 10 and 200 kg (22 and 441 lb)?
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Primates, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of
Primates on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
the discussion and see a list of open tasks.PrimatesWikipedia:WikiProject PrimatesTemplate:WikiProject PrimatesPrimate articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Africa, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of
Africa on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
the discussion and see a list of open tasks.AfricaWikipedia:WikiProject AfricaTemplate:WikiProject AfricaAfrica articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Palaeontology, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of
palaeontology-related topics and create a standardized, informative, comprehensive and easy-to-use resource on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
the discussion and see a list of open tasks.PalaeontologyWikipedia:WikiProject PalaeontologyTemplate:WikiProject PalaeontologyPalaeontology articles
This article is a part of WikiProject Extinction, an attempt at creating a standardized, informative, comprehensive and easy-to-use resource on
extinction and extinct organisms. If you would like to participate, you can choose to edit this article, or visit the
project page for more information.ExtinctionWikipedia:WikiProject ExtinctionTemplate:WikiProject ExtinctionExtinction articles
This article has been rated as Mid-importance on the
importance scale.
Article creation and upcoming expansion
Due to unintended delays, I decided to publish this article prematurely just to fill the unnecessary void. (Also, by putting it in the mainspace, maybe that will light a fire under my butt to finish it.) In its current "1.0" state, it could use a serious proofread and copy-edit. I will try to do that myself immediately following this post, but at some point I need to call it a night. In general, I prefer that others proofread my work anyway, since I'm not good at catching my own mistakes. A quick
class assessment would be greatly appreciated. Once the article is finished, I will obviously push it through
WP:GAC followed by
WP:FAC. Over the coming week or two, I plan to work on the article, hopefully finishing the last two sections. The "Extinction" section, in particular, is expected to grow significantly. Anyone looking at the source will see the hidden references I intend to use, so please do not delete them. Otherwise, enjoy the article and feel free to ask questions. – VisionHolder «
talk »04:53, 9 June 2010 (UTC)reply
I should also note that I am trying to avoid using any life restoration images that have not been approved by subfossil lemur expert, Dr. Laurie Godfrey. I have been working with her and two skill Wiki artists,
Smokeybjb and
FunkMonk, to create more. As additional "approved" images become available, they will be included on this page. – VisionHolder «
talk »05:41, 9 June 2010 (UTC)reply
Comments
Lead: "ranging as high as 20 or more species"—better to give the actual maximum
The lead should have something about the history of research (the proliferation of names and papers around 1900, the silence of subfossil lemur research after WW II, and recent renaissance), and about why they went extinct, but that should perhaps wait till the relevant sections have been written.
"
striped possums"—the link goes to the species Dactylopsila trivirgata and therefore should be capitalized, unless you actually mean the genus Dactylopsila.
The source just says "striped possums", so I'm not sure if it's just that species or the entire genus. The wiki articles on the other species are one-sentence stubs. – VisionHolder «
talk »20:51, 3 July 2010 (UTC)reply
"
gallery forests that surviving lemur species are most often studied in."—not "found in"?
The source says "studied in", meaning they lived in a wide array of habitats than the lemurs we've studied to date. Or I think that's what the source means. – VisionHolder «
talk »20:51, 3 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I looked at the source, and the relevance of the quote seems questionable: they're really saying that living lemurs occur in different habitats, and subfossil lemurs probably did too. Also, they're talking about the assemblage in a specific place, not about subfossil lemurs in general.
Ucucha19:27, 4 July 2010 (UTC)reply
"not all habitats in which they occurred would have allowed them to be strictly arboreal, including gallery forests and the
spiny forests of southern Madagascar."—not clear what the "including" refers to here.
"Yet despite this pressure to specialize and differentiate, some of the extinct subfossil lemurs, such as Archaeolemur, had island-wide distributions during the
Holocene, unlike the living lemurs"—wouldn't the appropriate comparison here be the genus for living lemurs? Various extant genera do have virtually island-wide distributions.
I'm going by the source. Unfortunately, I haven't made a range map for Archaeolemur yet, and I'm not sure how distributed the two species were. Today, though, I don't know of a single two-species genus that has an island-wide distribution, unless you count
sifakas as two species with many subspecies (like Tattersall does). – VisionHolder «
talk »20:51, 3 July 2010 (UTC)reply
"Subfossil lemur diets have been reconstructed using analytical tools, including
dental gross morphology,
shearing quotients,
microwear,
mesowear,
dental microstructure,
biogeochemistry, and the dissection of
fecal pellets associated with subfossil remains"—as I told you, I think you should explain what this all means. I'll say what I think they refer to, but am not familiar with all of them. "Dental gross morphology" is just the way the tooth generally look—crest arrangement etcetera. "Shearing quotients" might be something related to hypsodonty (high-crownedness). "Microwear" and "mesowear" look at the way the tooth is worn on a microscopic level; I'm not sure what the difference between the two is. "Dental microstructure" looks at the microscopic arrangement of the tooth enamel, with things like
Hunter-Schreger bands. "Biogeochemistry" may be isotopic analysis, like C-13 levels.
I've removed the list of dental terms and simplified, hiding the full text for now. Thanks for the suggestions, especially for "biogeochemistry." – VisionHolder «
talk »20:51, 3 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Given that the biogeochemistry is used to determine what types of plants the lemurs ate (by looking at isotope levels), I'm going to stick with your initial suggestion, if that's alright. – VisionHolder «
talk »21:53, 4 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I've got an introduction to mesowear and microwear from someone who does know about it. Microwear is looking at the occlusal surface of teeth under a microscope and noting the scratches and holes and little things in the surface. Mesowear looks at the sides of the teeth, at the cusp profiles. When an animal eats hard (abrasive) food, it gets blunt, low cusps, but when it eats soft food, it gets higher, sharper cusps.
Ucucha10:30, 9 June 2010 (UTC)reply
You link "niche differentiation" twice in the "Ecology" section, once piped to "resource partitioning".
The piece about seed dispersal makes me wonder how those plants that depended on subfossil lemurs survive now.
Nothing is said in the literature. One thing that is noted in the article is that genetic diversity of some species is narrowing regionally since seeds mostly just fall near the parent. In my personal opinion, I suspect other lemurs eat the fruits, but don't carry them as far. (Instead of carrying them in their gut, the carry the fruit in their mouth a short distance, eat the meat, and then drop the seed. Also, introduced animals may eat fallen fruit and humans may also act as dispersers to a limited extent. But, again, I haven't seen anything in the literature. – VisionHolder «
talk »20:51, 3 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Admittedly, I'm not familiar with the fruits of those specific species. If the seed has a mesocarp that the lemur will consume, they'll carry it. I don't know if some of those seed require passing through an animal's gut to germinate. A lot of times, it just helps with germination, but isn't a requirement. Maybe some species just require fire to germinate?? If I happen upon a source that answers these questions in more detail, I'll add it to the article. As it stands, the information that's included is only applicable to the arid southwest and not the entire island. – VisionHolder «
talk »22:00, 4 July 2010 (UTC)reply
"Most subfossil lemurs also had high
retinal summation (sensitivity to low light), resulting in poor day vision (low
visual acuity) compared to anthropoids."—what is the evidence for this?
Added. If I go into any more detail, I'm going to be explaining the OFI (the Optical Foramen Index) and lots of complicated ratios. I hope this is okay. – VisionHolder «
talk »22:17, 4 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I'm a little torn between addressing these and writing the rest of the article. At the moment, I think I'm going to work on writing more material and will come back later to address these issues. – VisionHolder «
talk »14:48, 12 June 2010 (UTC)reply
It took me a while, but I made some changes and wrote some replies. Don't bother with a new review yet until I'm done with the article... which hopefully will be Sunday or Monday. – VisionHolder «
talk »20:51, 3 July 2010 (UTC)reply
"one hundred-year-old calf" has been replaced by "two-year-old calf". Which makes more sense and also corresponds to the original French version : " «Trétrétrétré ou tratratratra, c'est un animal grand comme un veau de deux ans, qui a la teste ronde, et une face d'homme ; les pieds de devant comme un singe, et les pieds de derrière aussi. Il a le poil frisoté, la queue courte et les oreilles comme celles d'un homme. Il ressemble au tanacht d'escrit par Ambroise Paré. Il s'en est vu un proche l'estang de Lipomani aux environs duquel est son repaire. C'est un animal fort solitaire, les gens du païs en ont grand peur et s'enfuient de luy comme luy aussi d'eux.» (d'après Flacourt 1658) ". 09:55, 20 July 2023 (UTC) — Preceding
unsigned comment added by
176.152.85.92 (
talk)
Timeline
I finally finished writing the article, although I would still like to add a timeline based on "Table 1" from Burney 2004. I might try creating it as a SVG file sometime soon, although if someone is skilled at using
EasyTimeline, I would gladly explain what I would like to see. – VisionHolder «
talk »22:41, 4 July 2010 (UTC)reply
In the body, you do mention 500 BP, though, so perhaps this should be changed to "around 1450 CE" or something like that.
The source explicitly states: "Radiocarbon dates associated with extinct lemurs range from around 26,000 yr B.P. to around 500 yr B.P." Given the experience previous discussed between us, with Simons (one of the coauthors) confusing the definition of B.P., and given that I haven't heard back from Dr. Godfrey in half a week since I questioned her about this, I'm not sure if I feel comfortable deviating from the sources at this time. Ultimately, though, I do favor converting everything to CE... but not until I know how to interpret each source. – VisionHolder «
talk »06:22, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I understand. The problem is that the article is now contradicting itself, though: it says "500 years ago" in the lead and at one place in the body, but "500 years BP" somewhere else in the body.
Ucucha06:27, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I honestly don't know how to give you a satisfactory answer. Until the authors reply, which they may not, we're stuck guessing. The body cites the source verbatim for the dates. But you also think using "BP" in the lead is unnecessary. I've given an approximation instead, assuming the authors correctly used BP in the source (which I don't think Simons did). That's the best that I can think of. Any specific suggestions? – VisionHolder «
talk »19:49, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
"confused assemblages of bones"—does that refer to the misallocations of bones to the wrong animals? If so, it's not very clear.
Why does only one of the plant genera listed have its family given?
Actually, there were two: Cedrelopsis and Uncarina. The genera didn't have articles, so I provided a link to the families instead (so that people could at least find something about them). I've now created stubs for the species and removed the family links. – VisionHolder «
talk »00:06, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
"Since most giant subfossil lemurs have been shown to share the many of the unique traits of their living counterparts, and not those of
monkeys, the energy frugality hypothesis seems to best explain both living and extinct lemur adaptations."—might it be better to explicitly attribute this to the person who wrote it, to avoid the impression that it is Wikipedia that is choosing the best hypothesis?
"Dental wear analysis has shed little light on this dietary mystery, suggesting that monkey lemurs had a more eclectic diet, while using tough seeds as a fall-back food item."—this reads like it did shed light on the mystery.
Would it be good to include some of the other exotic early theories about subfossil lemurs? I recall some were also identified as apes.
I'll have to go back and review the literature. I thought I had covered the stories from Godfrey's sources, particularly the "aquatic Palaeopropithecus". Was there a specific source you had in mind? – VisionHolder «
talk »00:06, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Hadropithecus was thought to be an ape—it's in the article, but I may have put it in myself. Anyway, it's perhaps better not to mention all the weird theories in this summary article.
Ucucha05:57, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Let's save that for the genus article. I still need to clean that up, and I plan to run that through FAC soon. I'll be sure to mention it there. For now, I think the story of the "aquatic Palaeopropithecus" should tell enough about the confusion of the time for such a lengthy and general article. – VisionHolder «
talk »06:32, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
What is the seventeenth species (in addition to the fourteen identified around 1900 and the two explicitly mentioned in the "Research" section)?
"The subfossil sites are clustered together geographically and are recent in age, mostly dating between 2,500 and 1,000 years old, with a few spanning back to the last Ice Age, approximately 10,000 years ago."—that doesn't agree with the 26000 BP radiocarbon date on Megaladapis.
I'm not sure what those sources meant, and I wrote to Dr. Godfrey about it. I thought that maybe the 26000 BP radiocarbon date had been thrown out or something, but apparently it's still alive and well. I'm still pondering how best to handle this. – VisionHolder «
talk »00:06, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Never mind. I went back to the source and discovered I had misread it. The sentence should be clearer now, and inclusive of the 26,000 year date. – VisionHolder «
talk »00:12, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I don't understand the dating for the Palaeopropithecus bone with cut marks: 321 +/- 43 BCE would be 364–278 BCE, not 362–311.
I probably converted this incorrectly, but the source reads "2325 ± 43 B.P. (2366–2315 cal yr B.P.)". I have reinstated the exact wording from the article, though I cannot explain the mathematical discrepancy. It might have to do with one range being calibrated, and the other not?? – VisionHolder «
talk »00:06, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Dr. David Burney has replied and has promised to address these dating issues for me in a couple of days. Knowing how live goes for professors, I'm going to give him a couple of weeks. Either way, there is hope that we'll resolve these dating issues relatively soon. – VisionHolder «
talk »21:36, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
"As recently as the early 1600s, dwindling populations of subfossil lemurs may have persisted in coastal regions where tree-cutting and uncontrolled fires."—missing a verb.
I don't think a source from 1989 is ideal either for this kind of image, as much has been discovered since then. (Such as three new species of subfossil lemurs.)
Ucucha05:57, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I don't think the new species of subfossil lemur affect this illustration. In fact, I think the article mostly supports the Madagascar portion—a rapid die-off (followed by a slow recovery as new megafauna are introduced to the island). Again, tomorrow I'll email Martin and Burney and see what they have to say. As I said, I'll remove the illustration if needed. – VisionHolder «
talk »06:32, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Thanks for the thorough review! I'll try to take a look at things tomorrow and try to fix them up. A quick note about the graphics (last 2 comments): A "source" for
File:Extinctions Africa Austrailia NAmerica Madagascar.gif is given as "(after Martin, 1989)" under the "Summary" section. I've already tried emailing the file's creator to see if he could provide the data and full citation for the image so that I could recreate it as a SVG file, but haven't heard back yet. Are you heading to the library anytime soon? Maybe there's a table in there that you can copy ... if you don't mind. I assume the full citation is as follows:
Martin P. S. (1989). Prehistoric overkill: A global model. In Quaternary extinctions: A prehistoric revolution (ed. P.S. Martin and R.G. Klein). Tucson, AZ: Univ. Arizona Press. pp. 354–404. ISBN 0-8165-1100-4.
I'd noticed the "Martin, 1989" mention, but that's so vague that it can hardly be called a source. However, the citation you mention is plausible, and I'll take a look to see whether I can find the book.
The book is not in the library here, though it is supposed to be. I might ask a librarian when I get a chance, or find some other way to the chapter.
Ucucha15:41, 6 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I got a reply from the creator of the image, and I learned that he created it in Photoshop by duplicating an illustration he saw in the book. (I've asked for the page number and illustration number, but no reply yet.) I don't know how that kind of thing works in terms of copyrights. Anyway, he also gave me email addresses for Burney and Martin, so I may contact them and see if I can find what the illustration was based on. – VisionHolder «
talk »16:18, 6 July 2010 (UTC)reply
(butting in) - The diversity of subfossil lemur communities was higher than that of present-day lemur communities, ranging as high as 20 or more species, compared to 10 to 12 species today. - does this mean per ecosystem or locality?
Casliber (
talk·contribs)
20:17, 5 July 2010 (UTC)reply
As a group, the lemurs of Madagascar are extremely diverse, having evolved in isolation and radiated over the past 40 to 60 million years to fill many ecological niches normally occupied by other primates. - was it just primates or do they occupy any niches of, say, marsupials or rodents?
Casliber (
talk·contribs)
06:25, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I think the source was comparing lemurs to other primates, so they did not go into that. To make things simple, should I just remove "normally occupied by other primates"? Since it's a general statement about lemurs, the comparison (specifically) may not be appropriate for this article. – VisionHolder «
talk »20:21, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Hmmm, interesting. I am not a mammalologist so am a relative neophyte about furry critters. I am guessing they could occupy niches by non-primates elsewhere so I'm thinking it'd be a good idea not to assume they were primates if it isn't specified in the source. Ucucha may have an opinion on this.
Casliber (
talk·contribs)
20:38, 7 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I think we should go with what the source says. In my opinion, claims like this are always somewhat arguable—niches in one place are rarely exactly the same as those in another. However, the nonvolant mammal fauna of Madagascar probably contains proportionally more primates than anywhere else (I don't have the numbers right now), which suggests that the lemurs do occupy a broader range of niches than primates in general do.
Ucucha06:33, 8 July 2010 (UTC)reply
I am now passing this article; all issues that are left are the doubtful datings that we can't do much about.
Ucucha06:36, 8 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Post-GA Pre-FAC
I must admit that I was struck by how hard it was to find things to improve as I read through. I think this one has gelled very well and is worth a whirl at FAC sooner rather than later.
Casliber (
talk·contribs)
07:29, 8 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Thanks for the review—both you and Ucucha! Do you guys recommend that I wait on fixing the dates with Burney before the FAC run, or should I go ahead and submit it? Either way, the dates will be fixed eventually. I would never leave the article unfinished. – VisionHolder «
talk »14:24, 8 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Given the lack of reply and encouragement to continue on, I am submitting the article for FAC. (Sorry if I seem impatient.) I will note the lingering issues, the problems with the cited sources (beyond our control), and my continued efforts to give correct details. – VisionHolder «
talk »03:31, 10 July 2010 (UTC)reply
No problem. I didn't reply because I wasn't quite sure what to advise, but it should be your choice.
Cas, in relation to your query above: I found some discussion of this in Carleton and Goodman (1998, in Fieldiana Zoology). Madagascar, they say, has few native rodents (nesomyines) relative to other tropical islands like Borneo and New Guinea, and this could be related to "niche saturation": tenrecs and lemurs, who arrived before the nesomyines, had already taken up some niches normally taken by rodents: cheirogaleid lemurs are comparable to small arboreal rodents; Microgale tenrecs to shrew-rats and shrew-mice like Pseudohydromys of New Guinea; and Limnogale, the water tenrec, to semiaquatic rodents like Hydromys of Australasia.
Ucucha08:23, 10 July 2010 (UTC)reply
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