Duke Endowment Grant Strengthens Duke Lemur Center

The grant advances the center’s research, education and conservation missions

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Lemurs on trees

“We are thrilled to welcome a researcher of Elizabeth’s stature to the Lemur Center,” said Dye. “She will expand our strengths in conservation, research in Madagascar and at the center, and public education programs by connecting us formally with science taking place all across Duke.”

Lonsdorf began studying primates as an undergraduate student at Duke, conducting research at the DLC on the highly endangered aye-aye’s specialized feeding technique known as percussive foraging.

There has always been a significant amount of research at the DLC, in Durham and at field sites in Madagascar. Key focal points include:

  • Conservation missions— research and community-led conservation throughout northeastern Madagascar, and a conservation breeding program at Duke focusing on Endangered and Critically Endangered species
  • Studies related to human health— including age-related cognitive decline, especially with mouse lemurs
  • Studies related to sleep and hibernation— particularly with fat-tailed dwarf lemurs, whose hibernation practices might hold a key to long-range human space flight and therapies for coma management, diabetes, cancer, heart disease and trauma recovery

For more information about this grant for the Lemur Center, go to MADE FOR THIS