How about just a video and some photos?
Here, Indri lemur Singing in Andasibe-Mantadia National Park, Madagascar. Both males and females sing, and research has shown that group members carefully coordinate their chorus by copying each other's rhythms and synchronizing notes.
Sclater's lemur is critically endangered, having lost about 80 percent of its habitat in just 24 years. (Photo: Tambako the Jaguar/Flickr)
In ring-tailed lemur society, one top-ranking female usually calls the shots 'and is the focal point of the rest of the group,' according to the U.S. National Primate Research Center. (Photo: Berendje Photography/Shutterstock)
The aye-aye uses its long finger to tap on tree bark and grab hard-to-reach insects underneath. Legend suggests it can also curse people to death by pointing at them. (Photo: Anna Veselova/Shutterstock)
The endangered Coquerel's sifaka is a sophisticated communicator, using a mix of auditory and visual signals — including barks, wails and 'silent laughs' — as well as olfactory messages. (Photo: kkaplin/Shutterstock)
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On the road again. Houston, TX - Mobile, AL.
11.2023
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