angwantibo การใช้
- Angwantibos reinforce social bonds through mutual grooming and scent-marking.
- The life expectancy of angwantibos is at most 13 years.
- Unlike the Calabar angwantibo, the golden angwantibo has no nictitating membrane.
- Unlike the Calabar angwantibo, the golden angwantibo has no nictitating membrane.
- The Calabar angwantibo weighs between 266 and 465 grams.
- During the day the angwantibo sleeps under dense foliage, hanging from a branch.
- If the attacker persists, the angwantibo will bite it and not let go.
- The Calabar angwantibo is nocturnal and arboreal.
- The diet of angwantibos consists predominantly of insects ( mostly caterpillars ), and occasionally fruits.
- The second toe on each foot has a specialised claw that the angwantibo uses for grooming.
- The Calabar angwantibo is the only primate to have a functioning nictitating membrane ( third eyelid ).
- Angwantibos grow to a size of 22 to 30 cm, and have almost no tail at all.
- The Calabar angwantibo lives in the rain forests of west Africa, particularly in tree-fall zones.
- Before eating a caterpillar, the angwantibo wipes it carefully with its hands to remove any poisonous barbs.
- Calabar angwantibos forage for food alone, but each male's territory overlaps that of several females.
- Its foraging, antipredator, social and reproductive behaviour are extremely similar to those of the Calabar angwantibo.
- The Calabar angwantibo's diet consists mainly of insects, especially caterpillars, but it also eats some fruit.
- The golden angwantibo is a nocturnal and arboreal species that is typically found on small branches 5 15 metres above ground.
- Like other lorids, this angwantibo has a very short index finger, which allows it to get a strong grip on tree branches.
- When confronted by a predator, the Calabar angwantibo will roll up into a ball, but keep its mouth open beneath its armpit.
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