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Sloths
are medium-sized South American mammals belonging to the
families Megalonychidae and Bradypodidae, part of the order
Xenarthra. Sloths are herbivores, eating very little other
than leaves.
Sloths
have made extraordinary adaptations to an arboreal browsing
lifestyle. Leaves, their main food source, provide very
little energy or nutrition and do not digest easily: sloths
have very large, specialized, slow-acting stomachs with
multiple compartments in which symbiotic bacteria break down
the tough leaves. Sloths may also eat insects and small
lizards and carrion. As much as two thirds of a well-fed
sloth's body-weight consists of the contents of its stomach,
and the digestive process can take as long as a month or
more to complete. Even so, leaves provide little energy, and
sloths deal with this by a range of economy measures: they
have very low metabolic rates (less than half of that
expected for a creature of their size), and maintain low
body temperatures when active (30 to 34 degrees Celsius),
and still lower temperatures when resting.
Sloths
move only when necessary and then very slowly: they have
about half as much muscle tissue as other animals of similar
weight. They can move at a higher speed, which still isn't
all that fast, if they are in immediate danger from a
predator, but they burn large amounts of energy doing so.
Their specialized hands and feet have long, curved claws to
allow them to hang upside-down from branches without effort.
While they sometimes sit on top of branches, they usually
eat, sleep and even give birth hanging from limbs. They are
particularly partial to nesting in the crowns of palm trees
where they can camouflage as a coconut. They come to the
ground, to urinate and defecate, only about once a
week.
Sloth
fur too exhibits specialized functions: the outer hairs grow
in the opposite direction to that of other
mammals, i.e. pointing away from their extremities (so as to
provide protection from the elements despite living
legs-uppermost), and in moist conditions host two species of
symbiotic blue-green algae, which provide camouflage and
possibly extra nutrition, either licked directly from the
fur or absorbed through the skin. Many wild sloths will
actually look like they have green fur because of the
algae.
Their
claws also serve as their only natural defense. A cornered
sloth may swipe at its attackers in a usually futile effort
to scare them away. Despite sloths' apparent
defenselessness, predators do not pose special problems: in
the trees sloths have good camouflage and, moving only
slowly, do not attract attention. Only during their
infrequent visits to ground level do they become vulnerable.
The main predators of sloths are the jaguar, the harpy
eagle, and humans. The majority of sloth deaths in Costa
Rica are from sloths getting into electrical lines and from
poachers. Despite their adaptation to living in trees,
sloths make competent swimmers.
Infant
sloths normally cling to their mother's fur, but
occasionally fall off. Sloths are very sturdily built and
very few die from the fall. In some cases they die from the
fall indirectly because the mothers sometimes prove
unwilling to leave the safety of the trees to retrieve
them.
Until
geologically recent times, large ground-dwelling sloths of
the Megatherium type lived in North America, but along with
many other species they became extinct immediately after the
arrival of humans on the continent. Much evidence suggests
that the extinction of the American megafauna, like that of
Australia, far northern Asia, and New Zealand, resulted from
human activity. Nevertheless, debate on the matter
continues.
The
living sloths belong to one of two families, known as the
two-toed and three-toed sloths. Both families have three
toes: the "two-toed" sloths, however, have only
two fingers. Two-toed sloths are generally faster moving
than three-toed sloths. Both types tend to occupy the same
forests: in most areas, a particular single species of
three-toed sloth and a single species of the larger two-toed
type will jointly predominate.
Although
unable to survive outside the tropical rainforests of South
and Central America, within that environment sloths are
outstandingly successful creatures: they can account for as
much as half the total energy consumption and two-thirds of
the total terrestrial mammalian biomass in some areas. Of
the five species, only one, the Maned Three-toed Sloth, has
a classification of "endangered" at present. The
ongoing destruction of South America's forests, however, may
soon prove a threat to the others.
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