The gray mouse lemur has something in common with us—and it's not something good. Researchers trekking through the forests of western Madagascar looking
for a radio-tagged female of the species (Microcebus murinus) have found a male dining on her flesh (shown above). The cause of the female's death
is a mystery, since all of her vital organs were missing. This lemur was not previously known to eat other mammals, much less practice cannibalism. What's
more, although cannibalism has been observed in a variety of primates, including chimpanzees, bonobos, orangutans, several monkeys, and perhaps even
gorillas, all known victims of such cannibals have been infants or juveniles. Except, that is, in humans. The findings, reported in an upcoming issue of
the American Journal of Primatology, suggest that nonhuman primate cannibalism is not limited to infants and juveniles. At the very
least, the menu of the gray mouse lemur—one of the world's smallest primate species—is much larger than previously thought.
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