Scientific Illustration

  1. Search
  2. Ask me anything
  3. Submit
  4. Subscribe
  5. Archive
  6. Random
Newer
Older
  • biomedicalephemera:

Faces of Lorises
1. Nycticebus tardigradus malayanus (Nycticebus coucang spp.- Sunda slow loris. Note: possibly Nycticebus javanicus - the Javan slow loris)2. Nycticebus tardigradus hilleri (Nycticebus coucang coucang - the Sunda slow loris, type species)3. Loris gracilis typicus (Loris lydekkerianus lydekkerianus - Gray slender loris)4. Loris gracilis zeylanicus (Loris tardigradus - Red slender loris)
All lorises are endangered or vulnerable due to the pet trade and their use in traditional “medicine”. While these small and nocturnal critters tend to be much more adaptable when humans encroach upon their habitat than other species of primate (making due in the trees humans transplant as opposed to their native foliage, and dealing with the human presence in stride, for example), they’re still all too often thought to “cure” various ailments with their body parts (especially the slow lorises), and traded as pets throughout their native habitat of Southeast Asia, and when they’re successfully smuggled to the rest of the world.
Seriously, people. Their cuteness is so much cuter in the wild. Lorises are freaking adorable, and the hunting strategies of the various species and subspecies are so varied and fascinating that they deserve to stay in a protected natural habitat. I mean, among other reasons to preserve them, obviously…they’re just such cool little omnivores!
Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 1904.

    biomedicalephemera:

    Faces of Lorises

    1. Nycticebus tardigradus malayanus (Nycticebus coucang spp.- Sunda slow loris. Note: possibly Nycticebus javanicus - the Javan slow loris)
    2. Nycticebus tardigradus hilleri (Nycticebus coucang coucang - the Sunda slow loris, type species)
    3. Loris gracilis typicus (Loris lydekkerianus lydekkerianus - Gray slender loris)
    4. Loris gracilis zeylanicus (Loris tardigradus - Red slender loris)

    All lorises are endangered or vulnerable due to the pet trade and their use in traditional “medicine”. While these small and nocturnal critters tend to be much more adaptable when humans encroach upon their habitat than other species of primate (making due in the trees humans transplant as opposed to their native foliage, and dealing with the human presence in stride, for example), they’re still all too often thought to “cure” various ailments with their body parts (especially the slow lorises), and traded as pets throughout their native habitat of Southeast Asia, and when they’re successfully smuggled to the rest of the world.

    Seriously, people. Their cuteness is so much cuter in the wild. Lorises are freaking adorable, and the hunting strategies of the various species and subspecies are so varied and fascinating that they deserve to stay in a protected natural habitat. I mean, among other reasons to preserve them, obviously…they’re just such cool little omnivores!

    Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 1904.

    Tagged: primate loris slow loris slender loris PZSL 1900s 1904 natural history Comparative Anatomy cute nocturnal endangered species traditional medicine lydekker

    Posted on September 17, 2012 via Biomedical Ephemera, or: A Frog for Your Boils with 481 notes

    1. obeythekiwi likes this
    2. acarella likes this
    3. ginandbird likes this
    4. ahappycollage reblogged this from feeltherotation
    5. boloncespenesz likes this
    6. horgonyadi reblogged this from scientificillustration
    7. horgonyadi likes this
    8. maeraye likes this
    9. huutch reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
    10. evanhorizon reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
    11. spurloser likes this
    12. clumsy-bell reblogged this from aubreylstallard
    13. yourmostwonderfuldream reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
    14. mista-b likes this
    15. lucismos likes this
    16. slothluva101 reblogged this from agentoraaange
    17. beocean reblogged this from mudwerks
    18. amiashouse reblogged this from drstrangelystrange
    19. inert-memories reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
    20. ahappycollage likes this
    21. youalwayscount reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
    22. mirshasa reblogged this from wecouldhavebeenirvingpenn
    23. wecouldhavebeenirvingpenn reblogged this from alwaysalbrecht
    24. greenmarketgirl reblogged this from scientificillustration
    25. klaisguimeti reblogged this from drstrangelystrange
    26. forensis likes this
    27. klaisguimeti likes this
    28. drstrangelystrange reblogged this from sugarmeows
    29. heavenly-disaster likes this
    30. ffactory reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
    31. sugarmeows reblogged this from flashandfootle and added:
      I want to kiss them all!
    32. dendrophiliac likes this
    33. socheesypleasey reblogged this from scientificillustration
    34. bordeaux1901 reblogged this from ludh
    35. bordeaux1901 likes this
    36. ladyofthemeadow reblogged this from lanie100
    37. narcissusandgoldmund reblogged this from flashandfootle
    38. paintbynumbers reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
    39. foundinspirationmovingforward reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
    40. foreverdre reblogged this from yo-soy-milk
    41. yo-soy-milk reblogged this from scientificillustration
    42. palmercollection reblogged this from scientificillustration
    43. fluffybalboa likes this
    44. agentoraaange reblogged this from biomedicalephemera
    45. royalrainboww reblogged this from scientificillustration
    46. brittanyging reblogged this from scientificillustration
    47. loons-can-dive likes this
    48. isameizin likes this
    49. wittynonsense reblogged this from scientificillustration
    50. ludh reblogged this from scientificillustration
    51. Show more notesLoading...

Field Notes Theme. Designed by Manasto Jones. Powered by Tumblr.