An Aye Aye taps on trees to find grubs, then gnaws holes in the wood and inserts its narrow middle finger to pull the grubs out. From an ecological point of view the Aye-aye acts as a woodpecker because it penetrates wood to extract the invertebrates within.
Aye-ayes help keep wood-burrowing insect populations in check. They can also pollinate large flowers for palm trees.
aye aye live in Madagascar
a Munt of aye-ayes
Yes, aye-ayes are lemurs.
Aye-ayes move around by climbing trees, making short leaps, and walking on the ground quadrupedally.
Aye-ayes have exactly sixteen (16) teeth, unless they have lost teeth, are mutants, or are not aye-ayes.
No, there is only one recognized species of aye-aye, known scientifically as Daubentonia madagascariensis. However, there are subspecies based on geographic variations, but these are not classified as separate species. The aye-aye is unique to Madagascar and is known for its distinctive long middle finger, which it uses to tap on trees to locate insects.
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 will be extinct in less than 105 years.
Aye-Ayes are prosimian primates and are native to Madagascar.
Aye-ayes acts like squirrels (eating hard nuts) and also like woodpeckers (eating insects hiding inside trees).