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:
-
Spreadsheet Day
-
Art installation of umbrellas, Borough Market, London, England
-
Antarctica Day
-
A delightful day for donkeys
-
Wheatear, Peak District National Park, England
-
One on land, a million in space
-
Paralympic Games begin in Paris
-
The oldest way to fly
-
Jorvik Viking Festival
-
Molokini crater, Maui, Hawaii, USA
-
Look up, incoming…
-
Ring of Brodgar, Orkney, Scotland
-
Where Asia meets Europe
-
International Polar Bear Day
-
Mont-Saint-Michel, Normandy, France
-
Trooping the Colour
-
A deadly coast
-
Happy New Year!
-
Pegadung Rock, Lampung, Sumatra, Indonesia
-
Ocean City, Maryland, USA
-
Happy Yorkshire Day!
-
Remembering D-Day
-
This ‘snow’ never melts
-
Independence Day of the Argentine Republic
-
Pretty in pink
-
Huntington Beach Pier, California, USA
-
Mendenhall Glacier, Alaska, United States
-
Reed bunting
-
The bears of summer
-
Hemakuta Hill, Hampi
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

