
La página que intenta visitar sólo está disponible en inglés. ¡Disculpa!
The page you are about to visit is currently only available in English. Sorry!

![]() A species of fork-marked lemur believed to be new to science. Photo: Conservation International/Russell A. Mittermeier |
![]() Photo: Conservation International/Russell A. Mittermeier |
![]() Dairana, Madagascar. Photo: CI/Russell A. Mittermeier |
![]() Photo: Conservation International/Russell A. Mittermeier |
Wonder what it's like to track these peculiar primates through Madagascar’s steep, leech-filled rainforests? Former Audubon photo editor Kim Hubbard spent two weeks volunteering on a lemur project with Earthwatch. She wrote about her incredible experience for the magazine:
Standing there eyeball to eyeball with the lemur, I was not entirely certain what was going to happen next. He seemed to have come from nowhere, sailing over my head and landing on the tree in front of my face.
We stood transfixed. Slowly he leaned forward and gave me a few curious sniffs, our noses almost touching, before he bounced away through the trees. I was ecstatic.
Click here to continue reading “For the Love of Lemurs.”