It looks like this small creature is playing a game, right? But when a baby ring-tailed lemur wraps its tail around or gives it a tug, it"s actually working on crucial skills. The infants spend their early weeks hanging tight to their mom, first clinging to her belly, and later to her back. As they grow, they separate from their mom, and tail-chasing becomes part of how they learn balance, coordination, and group play. These primates use their long tails for communication as well. Raised like flags during group movement, the tails help them stick together in open terrain. Loud, rhythmic calls, scent markings, and "stink fights" between males add to the social drama.
Ring-tailed lemur
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Muskoxen in Dovre-Sunndalsfjella National Park, Norway
-
Getting to the bottom of the underwater waterfall
-
Black History Month
-
Asteroid Day
-
Birds of the Drömling
-
Green sea turtle on World Oceans Day
-
An ice cap-puccino
-
Beaver achievers
-
Wake up, it s Darwin Day
-
Burchells zebras for International Zebra Day
-
Wildlife Conservation Day
-
A long, erratic commute
-
World Otter Day
-
The Guggenheim turns 60
-
Martin Luther King Jr. Day
-
Berlin Festival of Lights
-
India Republic Day
-
Mexico celebrates its Independence Day
-
Where do those colors come from?
-
Eye of the cave
-
International Talk Like a Pirate Day
-
Bridge of Hillsborough County
-
Whatever floats your boat
-
Summertime in Alaska
-
Big Bend National Park turns 78
-
World Chocolate Day
-
Fall for birding
-
A horse of many colors
-
Notre-Dame Cathedral reopens
-
Rosa Parks Day
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

