Conservation status
Near threatened (IUCN Red List, 2016) What they look like
Unique among Eulemurs, common brown males and females share the same coloring—grayish brown with a blackish face and orange-red eyes. The more northern population has large, noticeable light patches above the eyes. Weighing 2-3 kilograms (about 4-6 pounds), they are sometimes confused with mongoose lemurs, which are grayer and sexually dichromatic.
Where they live
In Madagascar, common brown lemurs congregate in a variety of fragmented forests, mostly dry deciduous and moist montane forests in the northwest and rainforests in the central east. They are found in four protected areas including Andasibe-Mantadia National Park, Ankarafantsika National Park and Zahamena National Park. One of only two species found in the wild outside Madagascar, common brown lemurs also live on the island of Mayotte in the Comoros—likely introduced there by humans.