Category Plants & Animals

Who’s the king of the swingers?

Gibbons are the champion swingers. They have special bones in their wrists and shoulders to give them plenty of swing as they move from tree to tree. These long-armed apes live in the tropical forests of Malaysia and Indonesia.

Amazing! Primates have their own cushions. Many primates, including baboons which spend a lot of time sitting around, have built-in padding on their bottoms.

What hangs by the tail?

Woolly monkeys, spider monkeys and howler monkeys all have a bare patch of tail for extra grip. They are the only primates that can support all their weight with the tail and hang upside-down.

When are two legs better than four?

Crossing open ground can be a dangerous business with predators about. Lemurs can travel much more quickly on two legs than four. Standing upright also gives them a better view, and frees up their front legs, to pick up food.

Is it true? Slow lorises really do move slowly.

Yes. Lorises are the most relaxed primates. Unlike their busy monkey cousins, lorises stroll very slowly through the forest in search of food.

Picture Credit : Google

Which is the noisiest primate?

The howler monkey is well-named, because it makes a terrific noise that can be heard up to five kilometres away through the trees. They hold howling competitions with neighbouring groups, to remind each other to keep to their own part of the forest.

Amazing! Monkeys do sentry duty. When a troop is enjoying a feast, one or two animals keep a lookout for predators. They have many different warning calls. For example, they make a certain noise only if a leopard is nearby.

Who grins with fright?

Chimpanzees have a special fear grin. They use it to warn others of danger without making a giveaway noise. Sometimes, when chimps come face to face with a predator, they use the horrible grin to try to frighten it away.

Is it true? Bushbabies rub wee on their feet!

Yes. And they also rub wee on their hands! It’s their way of leaving lots of smelly graffiti on the trees. Every place they’ve gripped has a scent which says ‘we were here’.

Whose bottom has something to say?

Many primates have brightly-coloured bottoms which are easy to see in the dim forest light. These bottoms tell other members of their own kind where they are. The mandrill’s bottom is the most colourful – it’s bright blue and red!

Picture Credit : Google

How do lemur babies get around?

Like all primates, newborn lemur babies cling to their mum’s tum as she moves about the forest. As they get bigger and more curious, they have a piggyback, to get a better view.

Is it true? Only mums look after primate babies.

No. Baby titis are looked after by dad, and young male baboons often borrow a baby. No older male will attack, in case they harm the baby!

Do primate babies drink milk?

Primates are mammals – they give birth to live young and feed them milk. Most primates, including humans, usually have one baby at a time, but marmosets usually have twins.

Amazing! Baby gibbons wear bonnets. When it’s born, a baby gibbon has a cap of fur on the top of its head. Just like human babies, the rest of the baby gibbon’s body is completely bare!

Why are monkeys so cheeky?

All young monkeys love to play and it’s as important as school is for you! This is how they learn the skills they will need when they grow up.

Picture Credit : Google

What ate 500 figs in a single week?

All lemurs love to come across a tree of juicy figs, but one ruffed lemur once ate about 500 figs in a week. The greedy lemur defended the crop of fruit against any would-be raiders!

Is it true? Tarsiers have a swivelling head.

Yes. Tarsiers can turn their head half a full circle, like an owl. This is a perfect way to catch an unsuspecting katydid or other flying insect.

Do monkeys and apes eat bananas?

Primates do eat bananas and even peel them first. Fruit, seeds, flowers, shoots, leaves and fungi (types of mushroom) are all perfect primate meals. The orang-utan’s favourite snack is the stinky durian fruit, which smells like cheese.

Amazing! Primates chew gum. Many primates, especially marmosets and bushbabies, scrape away the bark of a gum tree to get at the sap. But when it’s fresh the gum is liquid, so the animals drink rather than chew.

Which primates eat poison?

Lorises eat insects that are so toxic (poisonous) that they would give other animals a heart attack! They sneak up on their prey and grab it with their hands. The golden bamboo lemur even eats young bamboo shoots that contain cyanide, which is a very dangerous poison.

Picture Credit : Google

Where do gorillas sleep?

It’s not just birds that sleep in nests – huge gorillas do too! They bend branches in bushes and trees and make a cosy bed just above the ground. Sometimes they make a mini day nest, where they snatch a midday snooze.

Is it true? Gorillas are monster meat-eaters.

No. Despite their enormous size, these gentle giants are vegetarians. They feed on fruits, roots and vegetables, especially delicious wild celery.

Which gorillas go grey?

Adult male, gorillas are called silverbacks, because of the silvery grey fur on their back and face. The silverback is the leader, who defends the troop.

Amazing! Gorillas use sign language! Wild gorillas communicate with grunts and body language. But a gorilla called Koko learned proper sign language, as used by people who can’t speak or hear.

When is it rude to stare?

It’s always rude to look straight at a gorilla. In gorilla language, staring means you’re angry and looking for a fight. Sometimes, gorillas beat their chests when they’re cross.

Picture Credit : Google

How do you tell a monkey from an ape?

By looking at its bottom! If it has no tail, it’s probably either a ‘great ape’ — a gorilla, chimp, orang-utan, or bonobo – or it might be a type of gibbon or ‘lesser ape’, such as the siamang. Except for a few out of over 100 types, monkeys do have tails. Monkeys and apes belong to a group of intelligent animals called primates.

Amazing! You are a primate! Like all primates, you have forward-facing eyes, a big brain and hands that grip. Your genes (the instructions which tell your body what to be) are actually very similar to a chimp’s genes.

Who’s stopped being a primate?

Experts used to say that the tree shrew was a primate, but really they’re more similar to insect-eating creatures such as moles, shrews and hedgehogs.

Are monkeys and apes the only primates?

Lemurs, bushbabies, lorises and tarsiers are all primitive primates. They have smaller brains than monkeys or apes and rely more on their sense of smell than sight.

Is it true? Primates were around in dinosaur days.

Yes. People have found fossils of early, squirrel-sized primates that lived about 70 million years ago – about the same time that terrifying Tyrannosaurus rex roamed the land.

Picture Credit : Google