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Aye ayes will be extinct in less than 105 years.
no. they are not extinct. they are still living in madagascar.
if the aye aye went extinct the ecosystem would live however it would be devastating in Madagascar where it is from.
Aye-ayes are listed by the IUCN as Near Threatened, although many consider it to be Endangered. It is threatened by habitat loss and hunting, and although it has a wide geographic range, it is rare in every forest in which it lives. The aye-aye will go extinct if people in Madagascar don't act to save it.
aye aye live in Madagascar
a Munt of aye-ayes
Yes, aye-ayes are lemurs.
The aye-aye is so feared by the Malagasy (the people of Madagascar) that in much of the country it is killed on sight. The aye-aye was once thought to be extinct, but recent discoveries suggest there may be 100 or more aye-ayes alive in the wild.
Aye-ayes have exactly sixteen (16) teeth, unless they have lost teeth, are mutants, or are not aye-ayes.
Mating can last as much as an hour in aye-ayes. Male aye-ayes fight for dominance when courting a female aye-aye.
No, aye-ayes do no migrate.
Aye-Ayes are prosimian primates and are native to Madagascar.