Ring-tailed Lemurs have coats of soft, thick, woolly fur. The fur on there is brownish gray and their tails are ringed with white and black fur. Ring-tailed lemurs have leather-like pads on the bottom of their hands and feet that help keep them keep their grip on slippery surfaces their hind legs are longer than their forelegs. Ring-Tailed Lemurs …show more content…
They are native to Southern and Southwestern Madagascar, an island off the coast of Southweastern Africa. “As of 2009, there were an estimated 2,500 Ring-Tailed Lemurs in zoos around the world, in addition to many more in smaller roadside collections, laboratories, and the pet trade. The species is not only the most common lemur in captivity, but indeed the most common of all captive primates”. Ring-Tailed Lemurs use their hands and feet to more around and from tree to tree. They cant grip with their tails as some of their primate cousins. Ring-Tailed Lemurs spend a lot of time on the ground as well as in trees, most other Lemurs stay up in the trees to keep themsevles safe. Sixty five percent of travel time is on ground. Ring-Tailed Lemurs are the only lemurs that travel on the ground all other lemurs travel through the trees. They walk, run, and gallop their tails give them balance. Running and leaping from branch to branch is easy activites for a agile aand speedy ring-tailed …show more content…
These small omnivores topping the scales at about 5 ounces, came from African rainforest. Tarsiers, another group of pint-sized prosimians hailing from Southeast Asia, are nocturnal primates with large eyes and a spinal configuration that allows them to turn their heads nearly 360 degrees. Lorises identified as slow, slender or pygmy also claim a spot on the prosimian branch of the primate family tree. The pygmy loris makes its home in southeast Asia, and the slender loris is confined to southern India. The slow loris boasts the largest range, which includes the forests of Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines, among