Chiromyiformes
Infraorder of lemurs
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chiromyiformes is an infraorder of strepsirrhine primates that includes the aye-aye from Madagascar and its extinct relatives.
| Chiromyiformes Temporal range: late Eocene to the present | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Mammalia |
| Clade: | Pan-Primates |
| Order: | Primates |
| Suborder: | Strepsirrhini |
| Infraorder: | Chiromyiformes Anthony and Coupin, 1931 |
| Families | |
Classification

The aye-aye is sometimes classified as a member of Lemuriformes, but others treat Chiromyiformes as a separate infraorder, based on their very reduced dental formula.[1] Gunnell et al. (2018) reclassified the putative bat Propotto as a close relative of the aye-aye, as well as assigning the problematic strepsirrhine primate Plesiopithecus to Chiromyiformes.[2]