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A six-year-old chimpanzee named Joya got bored waiting for her turn to eat and vented her frustration by hurling rocks at her family. She was soon put in her place by an adult chimp, who confiscated the stones and forced her to sit down. British photographers Anup Shah and Fiona Rogers captured the scene in the Republic of Guinea. Picture: Shah Rogers Photography/solent
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Photograph by Joe Gritton
Posted on August 28, 2010 via The Animal Blog with 95 notes
Source: theanimalblog
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(via theanimalblog)
Posted on August 20, 2010 via The Animal Blog
Source: theanimalblog
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A new species of titi monkey, Callicebus caquetensis, that was found in the Colombian Amazon region near the borders with Ecuador and Peru by Drs Thomas Defler, Marta Bueno from the Universidad Nacional de Colombia and undergraduate student Javier García with support from Conservation International
Posted on August 20, 2010 via The Animal Blog with 110 notes
Source: theanimalblog
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(via theanimalblog)
Posted on August 19, 2010 via The Animal Blog with 285 notes
Source: theanimalblog
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(via theanimalblog)
Hehee. :)
Posted on August 18, 2010 via The Animal Blog with 332 notes
Source: theanimalblog
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Monkey Among Mayan Ruins, Yucatan, Mexico
photo from National Geographic
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Photograph 112
Location: Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia
“Curiosity”
Photographer: Artu Nepomuceno
Posted on August 11, 2010 via The Animal Blog with 55 notes
Source: theanimalblog
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Queen Elizabeth National Park - Uganda
Posted on August 8, 2010 via Landscape, Lifescape with 15 notes
Source: dogansoysal.deviantart.com
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This undated photograph provided by the Zoological society of London / Sri Lanka shows a Horton Plains slender loris, in the Horton Plains sanctuary in Sri Lanka. Researchers in a central Sri Lankan forest have photographed the rare primate that was feared extinct for more than 60 years, the Zoological Society of London said Monday.
Dulan Vidanapathirana | AP (via Day in Pictures - Sacramento Bee)
Posted on July 20, 2010 via all creatures [great and small] with 71 notes
Source: sacbee.com
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The Rhythm of the Jungle by Ben Visbeek:
“Photo of the White-cheeked gibbon taken during our trekking in the Dong Hua Sao National park. We could hear Gibbons vocal element, which can sometimes be heard for distances of up to 1 km. They are are social animals. They are strongly territorial, and defend their boundaries with vigorous visual and vocal displays.”
Dong Hua Sao National Park, Laos
Posted on April 3, 2010 via Travelling Aloud with 70 notes
Source: Flickr / visbeek
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(via allcreatures)
Posted on March 27, 2010 via all creatures [great and small] with 142 notes
Source: allcreatures
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How do you do, my good lemur?
Posted on March 21, 2010 via all creatures [great and small] with 50 notes
Source: allcreatures
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Picture: Masashi Mochida / CATERS. via telegraph uk
These appear to be Japanese macaques.
Posted on March 17, 2010 via all creatures [great and small] with 186 notes
Source: allcreatures
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Hiiiiii, lemur!












