It depends on your size, but also the area you grew up in. People who live in areas with thinner air will develop larger lungs.
No. Large people have larger lungs, children have smaller ones.
they use their mouth and lungs....
Lemurs likely predate spider monkeys by many millions of years.
Living lemur species range in size from 30 g or 1.1 oz (mouse lemur) to 9 kg or 20 lb (indri). Recently extinct lemurs--called "subfossil lemurs"--were larger, ranging up to the size of a gorilla.
They are virtually the same, despite size factors
In the real life sense no, but if you make our bodies the same size our lungs would be relatively the same size.
Mouse lemurs are about the size of mice, weighing between 30 and ~70 grams. They have big eyes, round bodies, and a long tail.
If tigers and lemurs were in the same place at the same time, tigers would probably eat them. Tigers usually prefer larger prey like deer.
Lemurs get energy the same way other animals do--by consuming food, which usually consists of fruit, leaves, and/or insects.
They can range in size ("total body length") from about 10 inches (25 cm) in the case of the tiny mouse lemurs up to about 4 feet (120 cm) in the case of one of the largest living lemurs, the Indri.
The lungs are about the size of rugby balls but im not quite sure how much they wiegh
carbenson lemurs ,darshion lemurs,and kowltenson lemurs .I have 8 of them
It depends on the species. Generally speaking, the smallest lemurs have small litters of 3-4 offspring, while the larger, diurnal lemurs typically have 1-2. However, the ruffed lemurs have litters despite their size and diurnal behavior.