New Madagascar conservation map protects maximum number of species in biodiversity hot spot

New Madagascar conservation map protects maximum number of species in biodiversity hot spot
Picture: 
madagascar.jpg
Source: 
UCB News Center
Date Posted: 
Apr 10 2008
Summary: 
An international team of researchers led by UC Berkeley biologists has developed a remarkable new roadmap for finding and protecting the best remaining holdouts for thousands of rare species that live only in Madagascar, an island nation considered one of the world's jewels of biodiversity. The new plan not only includes lemurs – those large-eyed, tree-hopping primates that have become poster children for conservation – but also species of ants, butterflies, frogs, geckos and plants.