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The Epic Interactive Encyclopedia 1998
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Epic Interactive Encyclopedia, The - 1998 Edition (1998)(Epic Marketing).iso
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Aye-aye
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1992-09-02
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nocturnal tree-climbing prosimian Daubentonia
madagascariensis of Madagascar, related to
the lemurs. It is just over 1m, 3ft long,
including a tail 50 cm, 20 in long.
It has an exceptionally long middle finger
with which it probes for insects and their
larvae under the bark of trees, and gnawing,
rodentlike front teeth, with which it tears
off the bark to get at its prey. The aye-aye
has become rare through loss of its forest
habitat, and is now classified as an
endangered species.
One of at least 25 endemic primate species
threatened by catastrophic deforestation in
Madagascar, it is confined to a few scattered
individuals in coastal districts, although a
breeding colony has been established on an
offshore island from animals raised in zoos.
The first aye-aye born outside Madagascar for
more than a century was born at Duke
University Primate Center in North Carolina
in April 1992.