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Protected areas enhance mouse lemur survival in Madagascar, but translocation efforts show limited success

Protected areas enhance mouse lemur survival in Madagascar, but translocation efforts show limited success
Maps of the five monitored forest fragments in the littoral forest of Mandena (24藲56使S, 46藲59使E) in 2000 (left) and 2019 (right). The maps illustrate the changes in vegetation cover in the study area based on Landsat seven images composite (Hansen et al. 2013). Green color represents forest cover, red colors represent other type of land cover (e.g. degraded area, urban areas). Black polygons delineate monitored forest fragments. Fragments M15 and M16 are formally protected by the Mandena Conservation Zone, while fragments M5, M13 and M20 are degraded fragments. Credit: Oikos (2025). DOI: 10.1002/oik.11397

A long-term ecological study reveals that protected forest fragments in southeastern Madagascar (Mandena) significantly improve the survival of endangered mouse lemurs, while translocation strategies may fall short of expectations.

The study, led by researcher Andrea Vallejo-Vargas (NMBU鈥擭orwegian University of Life Sciences), analyzed 21 years of capture-mark-recapture data from the littoral forests of Mandena. This research aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of the different strategies put in place in this region, including habitat protection and animal translocation, for the conservation of the gray mouse lemur (Microcebus murinus), a small nocturnal primate endemic to Madagascar.

The research is in the journal Oikos.

Key findings

  • Mouse lemurs in protected had significantly higher average annual survival probabilities than those in degraded habitats.
  • Females consistently outlived males, with annual survival probabilities of 39% in protected areas versus 27% in degraded ones.
  • Translocated individuals had drastically lower annual survival鈥攋ust 4% for females and nearly zero for males.
  • Temperature positively influenced female survival in protected areas, suggesting a link between climate and resource availability.

Conservation wins and warnings

"These findings underscore the critical role of protected areas in safeguarding biodiversity," said Vallejo-Vargas.

"However, they also highlight the need for more strategic planning around translocation efforts, which may not always yield the intended conservation benefits."

The study also found limited evidence of long-term trends in survival, suggesting that the most severe impacts of habitat degradation may have occurred before monitoring began. The study contrasts with recent findings from western Madagascar, where has been shown to reduce lemur survival.

Despite the challenges, the authors noted that translocations could still contribute to if relocated individuals successfully reproduce before dying, as revealed that translocated lemurs carried more unique immune-related alleles than resident populations. But more research is needed to confirm the potential genetic contribution of translocated individuals.

The research emphasizes the importance of long-term ecological monitoring and data-driven conservation planning, especially in like Madagascar, where and fragmentation continue to threaten endemic species.

More information: Andrea F. Vallejo鈥怴argas et al, Effects of management strategies on the survival probability of a small remnant population of mouse lemurs, Oikos (2025).

Journal information: Oikos

Provided by Norwegian University of Life Sciences

Citation: Protected areas enhance mouse lemur survival in Madagascar, but translocation efforts show limited success (2025, August 5) retrieved 27 August 2025 from /news/2025-08-areas-mouse-lemur-survival-madagascar.html
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