Sloth

Query URLs

https://term.museum-digital.de/md-de/tag/97474

JSON SKOS Navigator Tree
Note
"Sloths are a group of arboreal Neotropical xenarthran mammals, constituting the suborder Folivora. Noted for their slowness of movement, they spend most of their lives hanging upside down in the trees of the tropical rainforests of South America and Central America. They are considered to be most closely related to anteaters, together making up the xenarthran order Pilosa.

There are six extant sloth species in two genera – Bradypus (three–toed sloths) and Choloepus (two–toed sloths). Despite this traditional naming, all sloths actually have three toes on each rear limb, although two-toed sloths have only two digits on each forelimb. The two groups of sloths are from different, distantly related families, and are thought to have evolved their morphology via parallel evolution from terrestrial ancestors. Besides the extant species, many species of ground sloths ranging up to the size of elephants (like Megatherium) inhabited both North and South America during the Pleistocene Epoch. However, they became extinct during the Quaternary extinction event around 12,000 years ago, together with most large bodied animals in the New World. The extinction correlates in time with the arrival of humans, but climate change has also been suggested to have contributed. Members of an endemic radiation of Caribbean sloths formerly lived in the Greater Antilles. They included both ground and arboreal forms which became extinct after humans settled the archipelago in the mid-Holocene, around 6,000 years ago." - (en.wikipedia.org 09.05.2021)
Search for this on museum-digital
  • Linck-Zimmer mit Gemälden

    Linck-Zimmer mit Gemälden

    Blick in das Linck-Zimmer,...

    Object information
    Image: Museum - Naturalienkabinett Waldenburg - CC BY-NC-SA

  • Samische Trommel im Linck-Zimmer

    Samische Trommel im Linck-Zimmer

    Blick in das Linck-Zimmer,...

    Object information
    Image: Museum - Naturalienkabinett Waldenburg - CC BY-NC-SA

References

[]

Broader (Generic)