Lemur is a type of monkey that only lives in Madagascar.
There are 264 known monkey species in Madagascar, i.e. including all old monkeys, new monkeys and apes.
No monkeys live in Madagascar. In fact, lemurs are not monkeys either--but they are a type of primate.
Howler monkeys
There are quite possibly more species of animal in Madagascar than on many of the continents. There are hundreds of species of bats, monkeys, lemurs and many other small animals.
Wildlife on Madagascar is prolific. There are all the world's lemurs, over 60 species, almost 50 species of bats and many other small animals.
Animals that live in the Madagascar are: lemurs, boa constrictors, iguanas, and other creatures.
The term "lemur" is mostly a naming convention for the prosimian (pre-monkey) primates that are native to Madagascar. The closest cousins of lemurs, the bush babies and other loris-like primates are still found in Africa. Lemurs made it to Madagascar about 60+ million years ago by accidentally rafting on floating debris and became isolated from the rest of Africa.
No, ring-tailed lemurs do not have any symbiotic relationship.
Madagascar
Lemur monkeys live in Madagascar. There are several different types of lemurs including, the ring tailed lemur, the furry eared dwarf lemur, and the amber mountain fork crowned lemur.
Lemurs are native to the island of Madagascar. Depending on the species, they may spend most of their time in the trees of the rainforest or other overgrown forests, although some larger species spend most of their time on the rainforest floor. Others are even found in the desert.
Madagascar has an unusual mix of wildlife. For example, the island does not have apes, monkeys, elephants, zebras, giraffes, lions, hyenas, rhinos, antelopes, buffalo, or camels that you might expect to find in Africa, but it does have lemurs, tenrecs, boa constrictors, iguanas, and other creatures.Due to its remote location, Madagascar was long untouched by the modern world. As with more than 9000 species of plants unique to the island, many animals live there that are extinct elsewhere. These include lemurs (primates), tenrecs (shrews), the fossa (a catlike relative of the mongoose), and other bats, rodents, and birds.
Like all lemurs, the ring-tailed lemur is endemic to Madagascar. However, it can also be found in zoos and other captive settings around the world.
Madagascar has an unusual mix of wildlife. For example, the island does not have apes, monkeys, elephants, zebras, giraffes, lions, hyenas, rhinos, antelopes, buffalo, or camels that you might expect to find in Africa, but it does have lemurs, tenrecs, boa constrictors, iguanas, and other creatures. Madagascar, An isolated island about twice the size of Arizona, has some of the highest biodiversity on the planet. Of roughly 200,000 known species found on Madagascar, about 150,000 are endemic. Meaning they exist nowhere else. Unique to the island are more than 50 types of lemurs, 99 percent of its frog species, and 36 genera of birds. Madgascar houses 100 percent of the world's lemurs, half of its chameleon species, 6 percent of its frogs, and none of its toads. Some species found in Madagascar have their closest relatives not in Africa but in the South Pacific and South America.
A lemur is a mammal, and a type of primate found in Madagascar and the surrounding islands. Lemurs' habitat is the forest, and they use their long tail for balance as they jump between trees, and also for communicating with each other. Additional Info: There are 60 sub-species of the primate Lemur, and 88 different species divided into five surviving families. Cheirogaleidae, Lemuridae, Megaladapidae, Indriidae, Daubentoniidae. Many of these are endangered. Many Lemurs are very tiny, and some researchers think that there may still be other sub-species or other species still undiscovered, and documented.