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Gummivores are a hybrid class of omnivores that defines a group of animals whose diet consists primarily of the gums and saps of trees (about 90%) and bugs for protein. (Merrit, J.) The animals in this group are classified as arboreal, terrestrial primates most commonly including the marmoset and lemur. These animals that live off of the injuries of trees are home to about 8m off of the ground up to the canopies. (Plavcan, J. M., and Kay, R.)

Specific Traits
A common example of a gummivore would be the lemur, whose diet is about 90% gum exudates from a tree’s branches or trunk. (Merrit, J.) The lemur is a primary example of gummivores as it possesses a special set of unique traits and characteristics differing from other primates. Lemurs have what is to be called a “tooth comb” which is made up of the lower incisors and canines. These specialized teeth are used to scrape off the gum on the surface of a plant. (Merrit, J.) The fork-marked lemur consumes the gum from an area beneath the bark of trees created by beetles. This lemur has evolved to take advantage of these orifices since they have a long, slim tongue to reach, and they also possess a symbiotic bacterium that assists in the digestion of the gums starting at the mouth. (Primatol, A.)

The black-tufted marmoset (Callithrix penicillata) is another good example that mostly lives off of the sap from trees. To do this, the monkey uses their lengthened lower incisors to chew through the bark of a tree and obtain the sap, classifying them as a gummivore. (Merrit, J.) The incisors are extremely specialized since they are the marmosets’ “tool” to acquire food. The teeth have a thickened enamel on the exterior, but lack the enamel on the inside creating a tough, chiseling tool. Both, the lemurs and marmosets have a gecko-like hand and cat-like claws which are extremely useful in clinging on to trees for extended amounts of time. (Merrit, J.)

Feeding Strategies
Before feeding time comes around, the marmosets must prepare their food by chiseling multiple small holes into the barks of trees. The actual bite left behind is about 2-3 cm across and just deep enough to retrieve sap. After about a day passes, the primates will return to their bite marks and consume the leaking sap. (Merrit, J.)

With the consumption of gums and other indirect sources of nutrients, the animal must have a digestive system to compensate. Gums of trees are beta-linked polysaccharides that are not easily digested. (Primatol, A.) These require a form of microbial fermentation to acquire the essential nutrients. This process takes the marmoset roughly 17.5 hours (+ or – 1.6 hours) to completely digest while carnivores take a mere 3-4 hours (proteins from meat). (Primatol, A.) Though the digestive process takes some time, the gummivorous mammals do not need to spend much energy to acquire their food resulting in less food needed.

Shelter Effects
Captivity in animals drives them away from their natural instincts and behaviors. The gummivorous families are commonly held captive and even as household pets. A gummivore like the marmoset has the digestive system and oral tools required for feasting on saps of trees, but when fed more nutrient filled foods there will be a severe change in the plasticity of the mammal. (Huber H., and Kerrie, L.) For example, if a marmoset’s diet is changed, over the next few generations of that animal, it will adapt to those foods, rendering their natural adaptations useless such as the chiseling teeth and the bacterial fermentation.