The aim of this review is to summarize newly available information
on lemur social systems,
to contrast it with the social organization of other primates and to
relate it to existing models
of primate social evolution. Because of their evolutionary history,
the primates of Madagascar
constitute a natural experiment in social evolution. During millions
of years of isolation, they
converged with other primates only in the most fundamental way in
the evolution of solitary,
pair-living and group-living species, but deviate in several respects
within these basic
categories of social organization. Solitary lemurs remain poorly
studied, but their social
organization appears to be broadly similar to that of other solitary
primates, even though the
unexpected lack of sexual dimorphism may indicate that similar types
of social organization
can give rise to different mating systems. The determinants of a
solitary lifestyle remain
elusive. Pair-living lemurs show striking convergences with other
monogamous primates in
several behavioural traits, but also deviate in that the majority of
species are at least partly
nocturnal and do not exhibit direct paternal care of dependent young.
Group-living lemurs
have not evolved single-male groups, male-bonded and multi-level societies,
and polyandrous
groups may also be lacking. Female philopatry is common, but female
bonds are generally
weakly developed and eviction of females from natal groups is not
unusual. Group-living
lemurs also differ from anthropoids in that their groups have even
adult sex ratios, smaller
average size and may split up on a seasonal basis. Feeding competition,
predation risk and
reproductive competition can not fully explain these unusual aspects of
lemur social
organization. It has therefore been suggested that the social
consequences of the risk of
infanticide and of recent changes in activity may be ultimately
responsible for these
idiosyncracies of group-living lemurs, an explanation largely
supported by the available
evidence. Thus, social factors and fundamental life-history traits,
in addition to ecological
factors, contribute importantly to variation in social systems among
lemurs, and possibly other
primates. However, neither the diversity of lemur social systems, nor
the evolutionary forces
and mechanisms operating in these and other primates are yet fully understood.