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Kintana the Aye-Aye: Lemur Fever... Catch it!

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M

Associated Press
Undated handout photo issued by Bristol Zoo Gardens, of 'Kintana', the first captive bred aye-aye, an arboreal nocturnal lemur, Daubentonia madagascariensis, a native to Madagascar, to be born in the United Kingdom. Bristol Zoo Gardens announced Friday April 15, 2005, that it is the first UK zoo to successfully breed and hand-rear an aye-aye, the largest nocturnal primate in the world and one of the strangest mammals on the planet.

S
SES posted on Wed, Apr 20, 2005 5:06 PM

Arrrr... looks like it's got some bat blood in it's genes.
Cute!

That looks like a Brian Froud creation!

A face only another aye-aye could love! I wish I could look that surprised!

The San Francisco Zoo had (no longer there)an 'Aye-Aye Forest' exhibit that was set up with reverse daylight hours, so inside the building, it was night lighting in the day. The aye-ayes generally don't do well incaptivity, as they forage and hunt like weasels on speed 15 hours a day, and need a lot of territory to cover.

Aye-ayes are believed by natives in Madagascar to be either the tormented souls of the recently deceased, or devils incarnate, so the natives try to kill them when they are found.

Aye-ayes have an etraordinarly long index 'finger' that they use to tap on branches to create an echo of wood that is harboring the insects that they eat. They break open the branch with their enormous teeth, then use their tapping finger as a tool to extract the bugs and grub from inside the branch. Thus, sometimes the aye-ayes are found searching for grubs near gravesites, and promoting the theory among remote villages that the aye-aye is a tormented soul, or a devil looking to steal one.

If there's a zoo with aye-ayes near you, definitely go see them, unless you're off to Madagascar to hang around grub-infested trees at night, that is.

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