qute a few, to say the least Infraorder Tarsiiformes[1] * Family Tarsiidae: tarsiers ** Genus Tarsius *** T. syrichta group **** Philippine Tarsier, Tarsius syrichta **** Western or Horsfield's Tarsier, Tarsius bancanus *** T. tarsier group **** Spectral Tarsier, Tarsius tarsier **** Dian's Tarsier, Tarsius dentatus **** Lariang Tarsier, Tarsius lariang **** Peleng Tarsier, Tarsius pelengensis **** Sangihe Tarsier, Tarsius sangirensis **** Siau Island Tarsier, Tarsius tumpara[4] **** Pygmy Tarsier, Tarsius pumilus
Lemurs, tarsiers, and lorises belong to a group of primates called prosimians. The sub-order Strepsirrhini (curly-nosed primates) are non-tarsier prosimians, and the sub-order Haplorrhini (dry-nosed primates) includes tarsiers and simians.
All organisms have cells. Tarsiers are large creatures, so they obviously have many cells.
Potential predators of tarsiers include civets, tree snakes, monitor lizards, and various raptors, owls, and feral cats. When a predator is observed, tarsiers will attack it as a group.
1,000
Enough to not be on the endangered list.
the tarsiers live in bohol where there is the famous chocolate hills
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a tarsier has one or two babies....
a squirrel group The above is false. Bushbabies are Prosimians or "Lesser Primates" along with Pottos, Lemurs, Lorises, and Tarsiers.
they differ by: 1) being much smaller, 2) having much smaller brains, 3) some higher primates also walked on 2 legs they normally walk on two. 4)lemurs and tarsiers are in the prosimians group and higher primates are in the anthropoids group.
Tarsiers eat only insects and small vertebrates.
Tarsiers are like all other vertebrates: they breathe oxygen.