
Sifaka - Wikipedia
Sifakas are medium-sized indriids with a head and body length of 40 to 55 cm (16 to 22 in) and a weight of 3 to 6 kg (6.6 to 13.2 lb). Their tail is just as long as their body, which differentiates them from the Indri. Their fur is long and silky, with coloration varying by species from yellowish-white to …
Coquerel's sifaka - Wikipedia
Coquerel's sifaka (Propithecus coquereli) is a diurnal, medium-sized lemur of the sifaka genus Propithecus. It is native to northwest Madagascar. Coquerel's sifaka was once considered a subspecies of Verreaux's sifaka but was eventually granted full species status.
Coquerel's Sifaka - San Diego Zoo Animals & Plants
Bright, yellow eyes peer out from the hairless black face. Long, strong limbs and a long tail make their arboreal travel graceful, swift, and seemingly effortless. Hear that? It can be hard to hear a sifaka unless it is threatened. Coquerel’s sifakas have a limited collection of vocal calls.
Sifaka | Endangered, Lemur, Madagascar | Britannica
sifaka, (genus Propithecus), any of nine species of leaping arboreal lemurs found in coastal forests of Madagascar. Sifakas are about 1 metre (3.3 feet) long, roughly half the length being tail. They have a small head, large eyes, and large ears that in most species are partially hidden in their long silky fur.
Sifakas - National Geographic
Sifakas are lemurs. Local Malagasy people named them for the unique call they send echoing through Madagascar's forests, which sounds like shif-auk. These primates spend most of their time in the...
Coquerel's Sifaka - Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Gardens
Sifakas move through the trees leaping 20 to 30 feet in a single jump. Preferring to remain high in the tree canopy, they descend to the ground only occasionally. When they do venture down, they bound on two legs (bipedally) in a skipping-like dance with …
Coquerel's Sifaka - Saint Louis Zoo
Sifakas are some of the largest living lemurs. An adult Coquerel's sifaka is about 20 inches from head to rump, plus another 16 to 24 inches for the tail. They are vertical clingers and leapers. They bounce and jump along the ground on their back legs, a …
Verreaux's sifaka - Wikipedia
Verreaux's sifaka (Propithecus verreauxi), or the white sifaka, is a medium-sized primate in one of the lemur families, the Indriidae. Critically Endangered, it lives in Madagascar and can be found in a variety of habitats from rainforest to dry deciduous forests of western Madagascar and the spiny thickets of the south. Its fur is thick and ...
Coquerel’s Sifaka | The Animal Facts
Learn more about coquerel's sifaka at the Animal Facts. Here you can discover their diet, lifespan, habitat, apperance, breeding and behaviour.
Coquerel’s Sifaka - Duke Lemur Center
Sifakas' small intestines are 9x their body length, which provides space to absorb fruit sugars and fats. Sifakas also have an enlarged cecum — in the figure above, the cecum is the structure that looks like a rattlesnake’s tail — which is another 1x body length.
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