Tales from the Jungle: February, Sloth Love Month
February is the month for love. And here at SloCo, we have so many things that we love (besides sloths), including, but not limited to:
A Little Taste of Heaven: Tracking Diaries #8
I’m standing amongst the wreckage of felled trees and bulldozed undergrowth, my boots crunching on dead vegetation, but I’m not looking down.
Sloth versus Pangolin
The humble sloth vs the armored pangolin, what have these two unusual mammals got in common? Pangolins are sometimes called “scaly anteaters”, because they A) have scales, and B) eat ants. If you remember our Sloth vs Anteater blog, you may be tempted to think the pangolins, like the furry anteaters, are distant cousins of the sloths, but in fact, they aren’t very related at all.
How do I love thee?
Supporters, how do I love thee? Oh, let me count the ways! I love your Urban Tracking Team, that finds me every day. I love you for your green-roped bridges that connect the canopy, I love you for your camera traps that take pictures of me!
Sloth Mating: Not as slow as you think
Sloths are mysterious animals—people usually only see them sleeping or resting on their trees. It is rare for anyone to witness sloths in the act of mating, and thus there is little information about sloth reproduction.
Confessions: Tracking Diaries #7
I stare at the low chair in my living room, which I would swear on anything you like contained an orange backpack full of specialized sloth tracking equipment the last time I saw it. It is now empty.
Tales from the Jungle: January & February 2022
December is usually a month where SloCo runs lean and much of our international team travels home to see family for the holidays, working from computers in the UK, Argentina, Germany, and the United States and sending texts across time zones.
4 Vegan recipes to help sloths
Deforestation to make way for cattle farming is a problem growing as exponentially as the human population. Cows make a lot of methane as part of their digestion process, and so instead of forests full of trees making breathable oxygen, you get feedlots full of cattle making greenhouse gasses.
The Etymology of Sloths' Names
Etymology is the study of words, particularly, the history of words. Thus, the etymology of a word is its origin and developmental history. So what is the etymology of the word sloth? And how does its scientific and common name share the same meaning?
Best Sloth Memes
Some experts consider memes an important form of communication. No doubt you also know someone who speaks in memes (millennials, we’re looking at you) and we love memes too!
2021: A year in Review
Well, it’s been a year, hasn’t it? Just when we thought we’d be getting back to normal after 2020, it turns out there is no new normal! If you are still trying to find your footing in this world going forward, know that you are not alone.
Top sloth blogs from 2021
It’s the end of the year again—time to reflect, reorganize, and recap the best of 2021. So here are our top 10 blogs, articles, photos, and stories.
The community of Puerto Viejo came together to stop habitat loss
Over the last few weekends of December 2021, we and our sloth guardians in Puerto Viejo witnessed deforestation occurring in the Maritime-Terrestrial Zone (MTZ) of the South Caribbean – specifically between Selina Hostel and the Cocles viewpoint.
Sloth Crossings Community Update! 2021 Highlights
What an amazing year we had! When we started this project we had no idea that we’d be installing more than 100 bridges… and in a few weeks, we’ll hit sloth crossing number 150!
Tracking Diaries #6: Dear Santa
“Dear Santa, This year I have been extremely very mostly good, and for Christmas, I would really like for a sloth to go poop.”
Meet the Urban Sloths!
The Urban Sloth Project is our latest scientific research project concerning sloth ecology, studying how habitat urbanization is impacting sloth health and behavior. For the next five years, we’ll be monitoring 32 wild sloths: 16 three-fingered and 16 two-fingered sloths.
Tales from the Jungle: December updates!
Happy December everyone! Wait, how is it December already?The final months of the year sneak up on us here in the South Caribbean. We don’t have the seasonal markers that signal this time of year in temperate climes—there are no autumn leaves, first frosts, or snowfall. We do get extra tourists, choppy seas, and sometimes plagues of various bugs, but that’s not really the same thing.
Sloth versus Anteater
In this episode of “sloths vs” we are taking a look at another member of the Xenarthra; the anteater. Anteaters are in fact the sloth’s closest living relative, though by “close” we don’t actually mean very close.