e/Ring-tailed Lemur vocalizations

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has glosseng: | border="1" cellpadding="5" width="800" align="center" |+ Adult Affiliative Vocalizations |- ! width="18%"|Call ! width="18%"|Vocalizers ! width="54%"|Inferred Function |- | Moan : : | All except infants <14 weeks | Promotes group cohesion in low-to-moderate arousal contexts |- | Early-High Wail : : | All except infants <6-8 weeks | Promotes group cohesion; indicates moderate-to-high level arousal level of caller |- | Late-High Wail : : : | Non-infant females (typically), males (rarely) | May promote group cohesion under conditions of extreme arousal |- | Howl : : | Non-infant males | Male advertisement call; together with female counter-calling, howls advertise the presence and location of the group |- | Hmm : : | All except infants <5 weeks | Indicates that slow group relocation is imminent and promotes group cohesion, or reflects a callers desire to maintain conspecific contact |- | Huh : : | Infants >3 months (most frequent); male juveniles and adolescents; rarely by adults | Similar to hmm, but marks a callers location more effectively |- | Purr : | Adult females (most frequent); both sexes of all age classes | Appears to express contentment; also may communicate...
lexicalizationeng: Ring-tailed Lemur vocalizations
instance of(noun) primitive primates having large ears and eyes and characterized by nocturnal habits
prosimian

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