Thursday, February 7, 2013

Want to see lemurs? Head to North Carolina | Reduction

Want to see lemurs? Head to North Carolina

Ring Tailed Lemur
Ring Tailed Lemur by jimbowen0306
License (according to Flickr): Attribution License
Excerpt:

If you want to see lemurs, there are two places in the world you may want to visit. The first is Madagascar, the island nation where these unique primates evolved and the only place on Earth they're found living native. The second, oddly enough, is western North Carolina. That's fortunate for me, because while Madagascar is a bit outside my travel budget, North Carolina is but a domestic flight away. In fact, I grew up only a half-day's drive from Durham, N.C., home to the Duke University Lemur Center, a primate research mecca where lemurs roam free on acres of fenced-in woods. The Lemur Center is dedicated to conservation (lemurs are the most endangered mammals on the planet, with 91 percent of species threatened with extinction) and behavioral research (the adorable little primates are humans' very distant relatives, and their brains take us deep into our own evolutionary history).

Want to see lemurs? Head to North Carolina

Additional Info:

Country: Madagascar

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Organization: Duke University Lemur Center

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Organization: Duke Lemur Center

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