Like other carnivores, euplerids can perceive visual, acoustic, chemical, and tactile signals. Communication is through scent in the form of glandular secretions and through a variety of cries, groans, and other vocalizations.
Communication Channels: acoustic ; chemical
Other Communication Modes: scent marks
Perception Channels: visual ; tactile ; acoustic ; chemical
All species in this family are threatened. Fossa fossana, Galidia elegans, Galidictis fasciata, and Salanoia concolor are considered vulnerable by the IUCN, and Cryptoprocta ferox, Eupleres goudotii, Galidictis grandidieri, and Mungotictis decemlineata are considered endangered. Cryptoprocta ferox, Eupleres goudotii, and Fossa fossana are on Appendix II of CITES. Habitat destruction in the form of deforestation is the main cause of their decline, though hunting by humans and predation by dogs also impact populations.
The family Eupleridae, the Malagasy carnivores, consists of eight species and seven genera in two subfamilies. The diversity of form and function in this family is such that some have suggested it be split into several families.
Cryptoprocta ferox individuals sometimes attack poultry. There are no reports of other euplerids negatively affecting humans.
Euplerids are commonly hunted for their meat.
Positive Impacts: food
Euplerids that eat fruit are primary consumers, and all euplerids are secondary and higher-level consumers, because they eat a variety of animal matter. They, in turn, are eaten by humans and domestic dogs, and possibly other predators as well. Cryptoprocta ferox is the largest native predator on Madagascar and, except for humans, is at the top of the food chain.
Euplerids are primarily carnivorous, consuming small mammals, birds, reptiles, frogs, insects, crustaceans, and other invertebrates. Eupleres goudotii is specialized for eating intertebrates such as earthworms. Fossa fossana and Galidia elegans may include some fruit in their diets in addition to animal matter.
Primary Diet: carnivore (Eats terrestrial vertebrates, Eats eggs, Insectivore , Eats non-insect arthropods); herbivore (Frugivore ); omnivore
Species in the family Eupleridae are restricted to the island of Madagascar.
Biogeographic Regions: ethiopian (Native )
Other Geographic Terms: island endemic
Euplerids live in a variety of habitats, from humid forests, marshes, bogs, and swamps, to deserts and savannahs.
Habitat Regions: temperate ; tropical ; terrestrial
Terrestrial Biomes: desert or dune ; savanna or grassland ; forest ; rainforest ; scrub forest
Wetlands: marsh ; swamp ; bog
Euplerid lifespans in the wild are unknown. Cryptoprocta holds the longevity record in captivity, at 20 years.
Aside from molecular synapomorphies, euplerids have few traits in common. They tend to have slender bodies with relatively small heads and pointed rostra, although fossas (Cryptoprocta ferox) are more cat-like in appearance, with blunt snouts. Head and body length ranges from 250 mm in Mungotictis and Salanoia to 800 mm in adult male Cryptoprocta. The thick, soft pelage is gray or brown, and spotted or striped in all but Eupleres and Cryptoprocta. The foot posture is plantigrade or digitigrade.
Other Physical Features: endothermic ; homoiothermic; bilateral symmetry
Sexual Dimorphism: male larger
No information is available on the specific predators of euplerids, besides humans and domestic dogs, both of which are not native to Madagascar. Cryptic coloration in the form of spots and stripes on neutral backgrounds probably conceals most species well. Eupleres goudotii is known to either run or freeze when disturbed, and Cryptoprocta ferox releases a foul-smelling substance from its anal glands when it is alarmed. Large birds of prey or large snakes are potential predators.
Known Predators:
Anti-predator Adaptations: cryptic
Mating systems in Eupleridae vary, as social structure varies from species to species. Fossas form monogamous pairs, while species in the genera Galidia, Mungotictis, and Salanoia are either found alone or in pairs, suggesting that they are monogamous within, but not across, breeding seasons. Species in the genera Eupleres and Galidictis live alone, in pairs, or in small family groups, which also might indicate monogamy. Mungotictis individuals live in small groups with several adults of each sex, but it is not known whether all of the adults within a group breed. Cryptoprocta individuals are strictly solitary, suggesting a polygynous or polygynandrous mating system.
Mating System: monogamous ; polygynous ; polygynandrous (promiscuous)
Euplerids have definite breeding seasons, which vary by species and last anywhere from two to eight months. Gestation lasts around three months. Usually there are just one or two young per litter, though Cryptoprocta can have up to four. Weaning takes place between two and four and a half months.
Key Reproductive Features: semelparous ; seasonal breeding ; gonochoric/gonochoristic/dioecious (sexes separate); sexual ; fertilization ; viviparous
Like all eutherian mammals, euplerid females nuture their young through a placenta until the young are born. They then provide their offspring with milk for two to four and a half months. Females of some genera, such as Cryptoprocta, select dens in which to bear and nurse their young. Mungotictis individuals live in family groups of several adults, juveniles, and young; thus, offspring have an association with their parents beyond weaning.
Parental Investment: pre-fertilization (Provisioning, Protecting: Female); pre-hatching/birth (Provisioning: Female, Protecting: Female); pre-weaning/fledging (Provisioning: Female, Protecting: Male, Female); pre-independence (Provisioning: Female, Protecting: Male, Female); post-independence association with parents
The extant native carnivores of Madagascar form a monophyletic group and together comprise the family Eupleridae (there are also three carnivore species that have been introduced to Madagascar by humans: the domestic dog [Canis lupus familiaris]; the Wildcat [Felis silvestris], which was introduced in the 19th century and is not uncommon in natural forest habitats; and the Small Indian Civet [Viverricula indica], which is generally found in heavily degraded and open edges or at the forest edge). Goodman (2009) recognized 8 euplerid species in seven genera and noted that at least one more form was likely to be recognized as a distinct species after further investigation.
The carnivores of Madagascar have been surrounded by considerable taxonomic confusion over the years as a result of what is now believed to be striking convergent evolution between this highly isolated carnivore lineage in Madagascar (currently separated from the mainland by around 400 km of open water) and the evolution of carnivores in other parts of the world. This convergence in features resulted in various members of the Madagascar carnivore lineage resembling cats (family Felidae), civets (family Viverridae), or mongooses (family Herpestidae) from "off-island" as they adapted to fill similar ecological niches (similar striking examples of convergent evolution can be seen in the similarities between various species in the Australian marsupial lineage and "ecological equivalents" evolving elsewhere). The recent molecular phylogenetic data indicating that all the Madagascar carnivores have a single carnivore ancestor rather than multiple ones implies a scenario requiring just a single ancient colonization from the distant continent of Africa rather than several. Unfortunately, although researchers have worked to identify shared derived morphological characters (i.e., "synapomorphies") uniting this group, which would support the monophyly indicated by the molecular data, no such characters have been identified. The sister group to the Eupleridae is the Herpestidae; sister to (Eupleridae + Herpestidae) is Hyaenidae (Agnarsson et al. 2010; Eizirik et al. 2010).
Goodman (2009) reviewed the history of the taxonomic treatment of Madagascar's native carnivores.The largest and best known living euplerid, the Fosa (Cryptoprocta ferox), is nearly the size of a small Puma and was at one time believed to be a felid (at other times it was placed in its own family or considered to be a viverrid or herpestid). The Spotted Fanaloka (Fossa fossana) and Falanouc (Eupleres goudotii) were believed to be viverrids and the Ring-tailed Vontsira (Galidia elegans), Broad-striped Vontsira (Galidictis fasciata), Grandidier's Vontsira (Galidictis grandidieri), Brown-tailed Vontsira (Salanoia concolor), and Narrow-striped Boky (Mungotictis decemlineata) were all believed to be herpestids.Today, species in the first three genera above are included in the subfamily Euplerinae whereas the mongoose-like species in the latter four genera are placed in the subfamily Galidiinae. By the middle of the 19th century, six of the eight euplerids were known to scientists and formally described. The Narrow-striped Boky was described in 1867 and Grandidier's Vontsira in 1986 (this latter species has a conservation status of Endangered, with a range of less than 500 km2 that is essentially a single location in extreme southwestern Madagascar). The Giant Fosa (Cryptoprocta spelea) is known only from subfossil remains and apparently went extinct within the past few thousand years.
The basic biology of some euplerids, such as the vontsiras, remains almost unknown. Conservation assessments are difficult for most euplerids due to a dearth of information, but the enormous loss of forest habitat in Madagascar during the latter half of the 20th century surely had a negative impact impact on all euplerid species, although some more than others. In addition to threats from habitat loss, most (possibly all) euplerids are consumed as bushmeat. They are all generally viewed by local people as vermin and blamed for preying on domestic animals, especially fowl, although much of this predation can actually be attributed to the introduced Small Indian Civet. The small geographic range of Grandidier's Vontsira may be due more to natural ecological conditions rather than to human impacts on the environment.
(Goodman 2009 and references therein)
Eupleridae is a family of carnivorans endemic to Madagascar and comprising 10 known living species in seven genera, commonly known as euplerids, Malagasy mongooses or Malagasy carnivorans. The best known species is the fossa (Cryptoprocta ferox), in the subfamily Euplerinae. All species of Euplerinae were formerly classified as viverrids, while all species in the subfamily Galidiinae were classified as herpestids.
Recent molecular studies indicate that the 10 living species of Madagascar carnivorans evolved from one ancestor that is thought to have rafted over from mainland Africa 18–24 million years ago. This makes Malagasy carnivorans a clade. They are closely allied with the true herpestid mongooses, their closest living relatives.[2] The fossa and the Malagasy civet (Fossa fossana) are each evolutionarily quite distinct from each other and from the rest of the clade.
All Eupleridae are considered threatened species due to habitat destruction, as well as predation and competition from non-native species.[3]
Historically, the relationships of the Madagascar carnivorans have been contentious, but molecular evidence suggests that they form a single clade, now recognized as the family Eupleridae.[4][5][6] The hyena family, Hyaenidae, is a sister taxon of the euplerid and herpestid clade, and when grouped together with the viverrids and felids, as well as some smaller groups, forms the feliform (cat-like carnivores) clade.[7][8]
The evolutionary divergence between the herpestids and the euplerids dates back to the Oligocene.[8] At that time, feliforms shared many similarities, particularly between the cats and the viverrids. Palaeoprionodon (within the clade Aeluroidea), found in Europe and Asia from the late Eocene or early Oligocene, looked similar to the modern fossa, while Proailurus, an extinct form of cat, exhibited many viverrid-like characteristics.[9] Despite these similarities in the fossil record, the modern Malagasy carnivores are distinctly different, with the Euplerinae and Galidiinae subfamilies bearing similarities with civets and mongooses, respectively.[7] Species in Euplerinae (including the fossa, falanouc, and Malagasy civet) have auditory regions similar to those of viverrids, while those in Galidiinae have auditory regions similar to those of herpestids. Based on this trait, Robert M. Hunt Jr. proposed in 1996 that Madagascar was colonized twice, once by viverrids and once by herpestids. However, the genetic studies by Yoder and colleagues in 2003 suggested that a single colonization event occurred by a primitive herpestid ancestor, which was quickly followed by adaptive radiation. The common ancestor arrived from Africa, probably by rafting, during the late Oligocene or early Miocene (24–18 Mya),[7][8] though Philippe Gaubert and Veron estimated a divergence date of 19.4 Mya (16.5–22.7 Mya).[8][10]
The phylogenetic relationships of Malagasy carnivorans (Eupleridae) are shown in the following cladogram:[4]
Eupleridae Euplerinae CryptoproctaCryptoprocta ferox (Fossa)
†Cryptoprocta spelea (Giant fossa)
FossaFossa fossana (Malagasy civet)
EupleresEupleres major (Western falanouc)
Eupleres goudotii (Eastern falanouc)
Galidiinae GalidiaGalidia elegans (Ring-tailed vontsira)
GalidictisGalidictis fasciata (Broad-striped vontsira)
Galidictis grandidieri (Grandidier's mongoose)
SalanoiaSalanoia durrelli (Durrell's vontsira)
Salanoia concolor (Brown-tailed vontsira)
MungotictisMungotictis decemlineata (Narrow-striped mongoose)
Eupleridae is a family of carnivorans endemic to Madagascar and comprising 10 known living species in seven genera, commonly known as euplerids, Malagasy mongooses or Malagasy carnivorans. The best known species is the fossa (Cryptoprocta ferox), in the subfamily Euplerinae. All species of Euplerinae were formerly classified as viverrids, while all species in the subfamily Galidiinae were classified as herpestids.
Recent molecular studies indicate that the 10 living species of Madagascar carnivorans evolved from one ancestor that is thought to have rafted over from mainland Africa 18–24 million years ago. This makes Malagasy carnivorans a clade. They are closely allied with the true herpestid mongooses, their closest living relatives. The fossa and the Malagasy civet (Fossa fossana) are each evolutionarily quite distinct from each other and from the rest of the clade.
All Eupleridae are considered threatened species due to habitat destruction, as well as predation and competition from non-native species.