The evolution and origin of primate social organisation has attracted the attention of many researchers, and
a solitary pattern, believed to be present in most nocturnal prosimians, has been generally considered as the
most primitive system. Nocturnal prosimians are in fact mostly seen alone during their nightly activities and
therefore termed ‘solitary foragers’, but that does not mean that they are not social. Moreover, designating
their social organisation as ‘solitary’, implies that their way of life is uniform in all species. It has, however,
emerged over the last decades that all of them exhibit not only some kind of social network but also that those
networks differ among species. There is a need to classify these social networks in the same manner as with
group-living (gregarious) animals if we wish to link up the different forms of primate social organisation with
ecological, morphological or phylogenetic variables. In this review, we establish a basic classification based
on spatial relations and sociality in order to describe and cope properly with the social organisation patterns
of the different species of nocturnal prosimians and other mammals that do not forage in cohesive groups.
In attempting to trace the ancestral pattern of primate social organisation, the Malagasy mouse and dwarf
lemurs and the Afro-Asian bushbabies and lorises are of special interest because they are thought to approach
the ancestral conditions most closely. These species have generally been believed to exhibit a dispersed harem
system as their pattern of social organisation (‘dispersed’ means that individuals forage solitarily but exhibit
a social network). Therefore, the ancestral pattern of primate social organisation was inferred to be a
dispersed harem. In fact, new field data on cheirogaleids combined with a review of patterns of social
organisation in strepsirhines (lemurs, bushbabies and lorises) revealed that they exhibit either dispersed
multi-male systems or dispersed monogamy rather than a dispersed harem system. Therefore, the concept
of a dispersed harem system as the ancestral condition of primate social organisation can no longer be
supported. In combination with data on social organisation patterns in ‘primitive’ placentals and
marsupials, and in monotremes, it is in fact most probable that promiscuity is the ancestral pattern for
mammalian social organisation. Subsequently, a dispersed multi-male system derived from promiscuity
should be regarded as the ancestral condition for primates. We further suggest that the gregarious patterns
of social organisation in Aotus and Avahi, and the dispersed form in Tarsius evolved from the gregarious
patterns of diurnal primates rather than from the dispersed nocturnal type. It is consequently proposed that,
in addition to Aotus and Tarsius, Avahi is also secondarily nocturnal.