GALVESTON, TX -- Guests will see double in 2017 as the Moody Gardens Rainforest staff celebrated the birth of two small, fuzzy Pygmy Slow Loris twins in the Nocturnal Exhibit of the Rainforest Pyramid ...
At the Smithsonian’s National Zoo, two brown, fuzzy babies with big round eyes belonging to an endangered species have been born in the Small Mammal House. “They are incredibly cute. They look like ...
The Lake Superior Zoo’s two pygmy slow lorises are named Colby and Giorgio. You can find them in the nocturnal building of the zoo. It’s rare for primates to be nocturnal. They’re the only venomous ...
For the first time, the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute (NZCBI) is celebrating the birth of two pygmy slow lorises, an endangered species. Small Mammal House keepers ...
Twin pygmy slow lorises were recently born at Lake Superior Zoo, marking a hopeful milestone for this endangered species. According to a release from the Lake Superior Zoo, the twins were born ...
WASHINGTON — The Smithsonian National Zoo has something to celebrate. For the very first time, pygmy slow loris babies were born at the zoo. The two new babies are an endangered species. On March 21, ...
GALVESTON, Texas (CW39) – Moody Gardens has welcomed a rare and tiny new arrival — the birth of a pygmy slow loris, one of the world’s most endangered primates. The male was born August 18, 2025, at ...
Two bug-eyed infants emerged the morning of March 21. Their birth the night before was a triumph for the staff at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute. The duo were pygmy ...
An accident when he was just days old led to an adorable primate at an Ohio zoo being named after a powerful Jedi master. The Cincinnati Zoo said the pygmy slow loris had an accident just a week after ...
London Zoo keepers have captured striking photographs of their most "superstition-shrouded" nocturnal residents with a night-vision technique. Capturing the wide-eyed stare of the bushbaby and the aye ...
The birth of two endangered primates on March 21 was a triumph for Smithsonian staff. Jessie Cohen, Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute Two bug-eyed infants emerged the ...
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