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loris
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loris

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The two species of loris are primitive primates related to bush babies and pottos. The slow loris lives among the trees of the rainforests in South and Southeast Asia where it feeds at night, mainly on insects and plant material, although it will take small birds and their eggs. It gets its name from its slow, deliberate movements.

Any of a group of small prosimian primates native to Southeast Asia. Lorises are slow-moving, tree-dwelling, and nocturnal. They have very large eyes; true lorises have no tails. They climb without leaping, gripping branches tightly and moving on or hanging below them. (Family Lorisidae.)

The slender loris (Loris tardigradus) of southern India and Sri Lanka is about 20 cm/8 in long. The tubbier slow loris (Nycticebus coucang) of Southeast Asia is 30 cm/1 ft.

The angwantibo (genus Arctocebus), potto (genus Perodicticus), and galagos or bushbabies (genera Galago and Euoticus) are similar African forms.

Loris

Pseudonym used by Austrian poet and dramatist Hugo von Hofmannsthal.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Other fossils unearthed from the same rocks include remains of fish, birds, bats, and small primates called lorises.
However, the new fossil also contains similarities to the ankles of lemurs and lorises and could just as easily have belonged to adapiforms, contends Gregg F.
These new finds double the age of the sparse fossil record for lorises and bushbabies, which with lemurs make up a primate group called the strepsirrhines.
 
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