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"It's the alarm call of the red ruffed lemur two or three miles away."
It also has less coverage and protection in large national parks than the red ruffed lemur.
The red ruffed lemur is a very clean animal and spends a lot of time grooming itself and each other.
The red ruffed lemur is mainly a fruit-eater, though it is known to eat leaves and shoots.
There are ten lemur species, including the flamboyant red ruffed lemur, which is native to the peninsula.
Later relocations of Red Ruffed Lemurs and possibly Sifakas may follow.
Three subspecies of black-and-white ruffed lemur have been recognized since the red ruffed lemur was elevated to species status in 2001.
The diet of the Red Ruffed lemur consists mainly of fruit supplemented by nectar and leaves and occasionally flowers.
The IUCN Red List states that the red ruffed lemur is critically endangered.
Despite having a larger range than the red ruffed lemur, it has a much smaller population that is spread out, living in lower population densities and reproductively isolated.
Formerly considered to be a monotypic genus, two species are now recognized: the black-and-white ruffed lemur, with its three subspecies, and the red ruffed lemur.
The red ruffed lemur and Black-and-White Ruffed Lemur understand each other's calls, despite living in different parts of Madagascar.
There is also another species of ruffed lemur that is similar to the red ruffed lemur; the black-and-white ruffed lemur.
The red ruffed lemur was downgraded to Endangered status from Critically Endangered status by the IUCN in 2008.
An enclosure is home to Red Ruffed Lemurs and Ring-tailed Lemurs where visitors can walk in with the lemurs without any barriers or bars.
The red ruffed lemur and the black-and-white ruffed lemur were formerly recognized as subspecies, Varecia variegata rubra and Varecia variegata variegata respectively.
The red ruffed lemur (Varecia rubra) is one of two species in the genus Varecia, the ruffed lemurs; the other is the black-and-white ruffed lemur (Varecia variegata).
These species include serval, Komodo dragon, white alligator, siamang, ring tailed lemur, red ruffed lemur, ocelot, scarlet macaw, Goeldi's monkey, golden lion tamarin, cottontop tamarin, and fennec fox.
Despite this, an assessment done in 2012 and published in 2014 reinstated the Critically Endangered status for the red ruffed lemur, largely due to the surge in illegal logging in Masoala National Park following the 2009 Malagasy political crisis.
Due to polymorphism in opsin genes, which code for color receptivity, trichromatic vision may rarely occur in females of a few lemur species, such as Coquerel's sifaka (Propithecus coquereli) and the red ruffed lemur (Varecia rubra).
News Release 7 July 2000 Critically endangered red ruffed lemur born at Bristol Zoo Gardens A baby red ruffed lemur has been born at Bristol Zoo Gardens.
Today, the black-and-white ruffed lemur has a much larger range than the red ruffed lemur, although it is very patchy, extending from slightly northwest of Maroantsetra, on Antongil Bay, in the north down the coast to the Mananara River near Vangaindrano in the south.