- from
India and
southeast Asia.
Collectively they are
referred to as
strepsirrhines. Also
belonging to the
suborder are the
extinct adapiform primates which...
-
haplorhines whilst absent in
strepsirrhines. The
haplorhine upper lip,
which has
replaced the
ancestral rhinarium found in
strepsirrhines, is not
directly connected...
- both
variety and abundance, the bush
babies are the most
successful strepsirrhine primates in Africa,
according to the
African Wildlife Foundation. Galagos...
- primates. As with all
strepsirrhine primates, they have a "wet nose" (rhinarium).
Lemurs are
generally the most
social of the
strepsirrhine primates, living...
-
Loris is the
common name for the
strepsirrhine mammals of the
subfamily Lorinae (sometimes
spelled Lorisinae) in the
family Lorisidae.
Loris is one genus...
- The ring-tailed
lemur (Lemur catta) is a medium- to larger-sized
strepsirrhine (wet-nosed) primate, and the most internationally-recognized
lemur species...
- aye-aye (Daubentonia madagascariensis) is a long-fingered lemur, a
strepsirrhine primate native to
Madagascar with rodent-like
teeth that perpetually...
- the
members of a
diverse order of mammals. They are
divided into the
strepsirrhines,
which include the lemurs, galagos, and lorisids, and the haplorhines...
- and
endangered strepsirrhine primates,
located at Duke
University in Durham,
North Carolina. It is the
largest sanctuary for
strepsirrhine primates in the...
- by primatologists. Lemurs, lorises, and
galagos are not monkeys, but
strepsirrhine primates (suborder Strepsirrhini). The simians'
sister group, the tarsiers...