Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The first 11 lemur residents of the reserve in Myakka City arrived in 1999 from the Duke Lemur Center. The Florida-based facility had its opening ceremony in 2000. Two years later, the reserve had its first birth, a mongoose lemur named Alexandro. [8]: 4 Initially, the reserve primarily focused on behavioral research.
They make their home in hammocks, forests or swamps. [37] The Florida panther is a population of cougars found in Florida. It differs from other populations by having longer legs, a smaller size, and a shorter darker coat. The skull of the Florida panther is broader and flatter with highly arched nasal bones. [38]
Leepa, a professor of art at Michigan State University from 1945 to 1983 and an abstract expressionist artist in his own right, [4] was the stepson of Abraham Rattner (1893–1978) [5] – a highly regarded 20th-century modern artist who was a friend and contemporary of Pablo Picasso and other early modernists in Paris in the 1920s and 1930s [2 ...
Pages in category "Painters from Florida" The following 39 pages are in this category, out of 39 total. ... This page was last edited on 11 May 2013, ...
Pages in category "Lemurs" The following 33 pages are in this category, out of 33 total. ... This page was last edited on 5 April 2024, at 05:05 (UTC).
Zoboomafoo is a live-action/animated children's television series that originally aired on PBS from January 25, 1999, to November 21, 2001. After the original run on public television, reruns were shown on PBS Kids Sprout until 2012.
ZooTampa at Lowry Park (formerly known as Lowry Park Zoo or Lowry Park Zoological Garden) is a 63-acre (25 ha) nonprofit zoo located in Tampa, Florida.In 2009, Lowry Park Zoo was voted the #1 Family Friendly Zoo in the US by Parents Magazine, [3] and is recognized by the State of Florida as the center for Florida wildlife conservation and biodiversity (HB 457).
Archaeoindris fontoynontii is an extinct giant lemur and the largest primate known to have evolved on Madagascar, comparable in size to a male gorilla.It belonged to a family of extinct lemurs known as "sloth lemurs" (Palaeopropithecidae) and, because of its extremely large size, it has been compared to the ground sloths that once roamed North and South America.