We hate to break it to you, but the affable grin on this pale-throated sloth is probably not due to its laid-back lifestyle. Our adorable tree hugger looks content thanks to its facial mask and the natural shape of its mouth. Spotting one of these slow-moving solitary animals takes a little skill. The thick outer layer of a sloth"s coat is an ideal growing medium for green algae, which forms a natural camouflage in the canopy of tropical forests here in northern South America. If you do spot a pale-throated sloth it will likely be enjoying a simple meal of leaves, limbs, and tree buds. Because sloths don"t have incisors, they spend most of their waking hours smacking their lips together "to chew" their food. This would drive most animals to starvation (if not culinary madness), but the sloth"s metabolism is so slow that it"s evolved to survive on less food.
Meet the slowest flirt in the animal world
Today in History
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Happy Cousins Day!
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International Museum Day
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Hemingway’s Keys
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Let s celebrate cephalopods
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Paradise Cave, Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park, Vietnam
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Spreadsheet Day
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Black History Month
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The Cordillera de la Sal in the Cordillera Domeyko Range of Chile
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Join us in celebrating World Water Day
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Castle Stalker, Argyll, Scotland
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Ready, set, read
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Moai statues on Easter Island, Chile
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The Battle of the Bulge 75 years later
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It’s showtime for a precious crop
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Pollinator Week
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Discovery Day in Yukon, Canada
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Tall, taller, tallest
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Monarch butterflies, Pismo Beach, California
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A viewer with a view
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Manatee Appreciation Day
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Native American Heritage Month
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La Brecha de Rolando (Rolands Breach), Spain
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Winter in England s Cotswolds
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Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia
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A leafy seadragon in the waters off Wool Bay, Australia
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Lights, camera, Sundance
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Seventeen arches at sunset
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Hungarian Parliament Building, Budapest, Hungary
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Plitvice Lakes National Park in Croatia
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Pont dArcole over the Seine river, Paris, France
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