Philippine Tarsier (Carlito syrichta), family Tarsiidae, endemic to the Philippines
photograph by LucasSamson2012

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Philippine Tarsier (Carlito syrichta), family Tarsiidae, endemic to the Philippines
photograph by LucasSamson2012
Has tarsier been done?
Tarsiers haven't been done yet. I can do the whole family, to start us off.
Have you seen a tarsier (Family: Tarsiidae)?
I have now
Yes, in photos/videos
Yes, irl
I'm not sure
The first species is Gursky's spectral tarsier, the second species is the Bornean tarsier.
Spectral Tarsier Tarsius tarsier
Found on the island of Selayar in Indonesia. A 2007 study found that spectral tarsiers were monogamous and territorial. Families slept at the same sites each day and that they gave loud duet songs as they gathered at sleeping sites. Tarsier young are quite advanced and start traveling alone at as young as 23 days.
image by Forest Botial-Jarvis
Tarsier 🐒 Natural World S36E04 "Nature's Miniature Miracles"
The ancestors of these primates were daytime hunters, but there was so much competition for food they were forced into the shadows. They evolved huge gremlin-like eyes - the largest of any mammal relative to their body size - which helps them see in the faintest light.
A Western tarsier (Cephalopachus bancanus) clings to a branch in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo
by Geoff Gallice
Horsfield's Tarsier
Gursky's spectral tarsier (Tarsius spectrumgurskyae)
Photo by Chien Lee
For Indonesia’s newest tarsier, a debut a quarter century in the making
In 1993, scientists Alexandra Nietsch and Carsten Niemitz reported finding tarsiers, a type of small primate, on an island chain off eastern Indonesia’s larger Sulawesi Island.
Sulawesi’s biodiversity was little known then, and the notion that the tarsier from the Togean Islands might be a new species spurred a series of studies that looked at everything from the tarsier’s vocalizations to its DNA sequence.
Finally, in a study published this year in the annual journal Primate Conservation, that initial discovery by Nietsch and Niemitz a quarter of a century ago has been officially confirmed as a new species: Niemitz’s tarsier (Tarsius niemitzi), named in honor of the man “universally regarded as the father of tarsier field biology,” the study says.
“The biodiversity of Sulawesi is much like the biodiversity of the Galapagos Islands, made famous by Darwin’s work,” Myron Shekelle, a professor of anthropology at Western Washington University in Bellingham, WA, and the lead author of the paper describing the new species, told Mongabay in an email.
“Numerous related species were each individually adapted to the specifics of a given island,” he added. “Why would any of us choose to walk away, while species remain undescribed and questions remain unanswered?”
Shekelle was also the lead author of a 2017 report describing two new tarsier species from the northern peninsula of Sulawesi.
While newly described to science, T. niemitzi has long been known to locals by the names bunsing, tangkasi and podi. Its weight and tail length fall within the range of a number of other tarsier species, but the tarsier from the Togean Islands lacks a reduced tail tuft, which is atypical for tarsiers endemic to small islands, according to the study.
Vocalization analysis based on recordings show that its duet is structurally simple, possibly the simplest of all known tarsier duets, the paper adds.
“Togean tarsiers are unique among known tarsier acoustic forms in that they respond in playback experiments to all other tarsier duet calls by duetting themselves,” the authors write.
They also looked into the conservation status of the Niemitz’s tarsier and suggested it be classified as endangered, largely due to its isolation on the Togean Islands, cut off from the Sulawesi main island by water that goes down to depths greater than 120 meters (400 feet).
“The broader implication is that the Togean Islands possess a largely endemic biota of taxa that do not disperse easily across water barriers,” the paper says.