Organization of white adipose tissue in lemuridae

Am J Primatol. 1995;35(1):1-13. doi: 10.1002/ajp.1350350102.

Abstract

The gross anatomy of white adipose tissue was studied in seven carcasses representing three lemurid species (Lemur catta, Eulemur fulvus, E. mongoz) to validate in vivo methods of assessing fatness, and to contribute to a comprehensive database on the organization of adipose tissue in Mammalia. During the years preceding their deaths, subjects had been either caged or semi-provisioned under semi-captive conditions, and their body masses had been recorded several times annually. All specimens were as fat or fatter than anthropoid primates maintained for long periods under comparable conditions. At least eight superficial, four intra-abdominal, and two intermuscular adipose depots were described, all of which were comparable to those described previously for macaques and humans. All typical mammalian depots were present. Many superficial depots adhered tightly to the skin and/or underlying muscles. The superficial "paunch" depot on the outer ventral wall of the abdomen, characteristic of anthropoid primates, was found in all specimens. The existence of this depot in lemurs suggests that it evolved early in Primates. As in monkeys and humans, the paunch was very variable in size, massive in obese specimens but almost absent in moderately lean ones, confirming that extensive accumulation and selective depletion of adipose tissue at this depot is a special feature of Primates. In some obese specimens, adipose tissue on the ventral and lateral thorax and on the inner dorsal wall of the abdomen, extending around the kidneys and into the pelvic canal, was also massive. The investigation allowed for improvement of protocols for external measurement in ongoing research on growth, mass, and fatness in ringtailed and redfronted lemurs. Comparisons of subjects' ranges of body mass change during adult life with masses of adipose tissue found upon dissection suggested that much of lemurs' predictable seasonal change in body mass is due to changes in the mass of white adipose tissue. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Keywords: Eulemur fulvus; Lemur catta; adipose tissue; gross anatomy; lemurs; obesity.