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Monkey Life is a TV series based on the work of the largest monkey and ape rescue centre/sanctuary in the world: Monkey World in Dorset, United Kingdom. The series is a follow-on from the original ITV series Monkey Business , and shows the day-to-day work and troubles of the staff.
The website's consensus reads: "Chimpanzee often anthropomorphizes its subjects, but it's a beautifully filmed, remarkably intimate look at the lives of a family of primates". [13] Metacritic , which uses a weighted average , assigned the film a score of 57 out of 100, based on 23 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews. [ 14 ]
It's a Big Big World: Professor Bobo: Gorilla Mystery Science Theater 3000: Sal Minella: Chimpanzee Muppets Tonight: Smash Gorilla Power Rangers Beast Morphers: Ravi's Beast Bot partner Stink Orangutan: Land of the Lost: Smooch and Winslow Common marmoset: It's a Big Big World: Treelo Ring-tailed lemur: Bear in the Big Blue House: Zoboomafoo ...
Entrance, photographed in May 2006. Set up in 1987 by Jim Cronin with assistance from both Jeremy Keeling [2] and later operated by both Cronin and his wife Alison along with a team of care staff led by Keeling, Monkey World was originally intended to provide a home for abused chimpanzees used as props by Spanish beach photographers, but is now home to many different species of primates.
Cronin could hardly believe that his small refuge centre had grown into a thriving rescue centre for primates from around the world. Monkey World worked with the Ping Tung Rescue Centre in Taiwan in stopping the illegal smuggling of apes from the wild, and Monkey World was able to re-home some of the primates from the Ping Tung Rescue Centre ...
Monkey Planet is a British documentary television series that was first broadcast on BBC One on 2 April 2014. Presented by George McGavin , the series was produced by the BBC Natural History Unit and Animal Planet .
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Films about primates, eutherian mammals. There are 190–448 species of living primates, depending on which classification is used. New primate species continue to be discovered: over 25 species were described in the first decade of the 2000s, and eleven since 2010. Primates are divided into two distinct suborders.