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| An aye-aye (Daubentonia madagascariensis) foraging Joseph Wolf c. 1863 Wikipedia Commons (public domain) |
It is widely accepted that Madagascar was colonized by mammals rafting across the Mozambique Strait (see previous post). The lemurs (Lemuriformes) and the aye-aye (within its own Infraorder Chiromyiformes) have hitherto been thought to be descended from a single founder.
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| New tree for strepsirrhine primates from Gunnel et al. Nature Communications 2018 (here) CC |
Firstly, they show Simpson was right about Propotto. Secondly, they construct a tree (combining morphological and molecular data) showing the split between Lemuriformes and Chiromyiformes occurred in the Eocene. Thirdly, it is most parsimonious to assume two separate rafting events with the ancestor of the aye-aye drifting to Madagascar on its own raft. Finally, both rafting events are likely to have occurred in the Miocene, which explains the lack of fossils of earlier date.
Placentation in the aye-aye
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| Allantochorion of the aye-aye. From Hill & Burne 1922 (here) |


