About: Burglar Monkey   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The curious burglar monkeys are not true monkeys at all, but a species of lorisid. The lithe little opportunists clamber among the high branches of the canopy, eating fruit, nuts, flower buds and insects, but also have a taste for bird and lizard eggs, taking them straight out of their nests at night. Burglar monkeys are not especially fast or possessing of impressive defenses like many of the island’s denizens. To avoid predators, they curl up in communal dens inside holes in trees during the day, emerging at dusk when their keen senses give them an edge.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Burglar Monkey
rdfs:comment
  • The curious burglar monkeys are not true monkeys at all, but a species of lorisid. The lithe little opportunists clamber among the high branches of the canopy, eating fruit, nuts, flower buds and insects, but also have a taste for bird and lizard eggs, taking them straight out of their nests at night. Burglar monkeys are not especially fast or possessing of impressive defenses like many of the island’s denizens. To avoid predators, they curl up in communal dens inside holes in trees during the day, emerging at dusk when their keen senses give them an edge.
  • The Burglar Monkey, Perfossor novus, is a dark-furred lorisid from the jungle canopy of Skull Island. It measures 1-2 feet long. The curious burglar monkeys are not true monkeys at all, but a species of lorisid. The lithe little opportunists clamber among the high branches of the canopy, eating fruit, nuts, flower buds and insects, but also have a taste for bird and lizard eggs, taking them straight out of their nests at night.
dcterms:subject
abstract
  • The Burglar Monkey, Perfossor novus, is a dark-furred lorisid from the jungle canopy of Skull Island. It measures 1-2 feet long. The curious burglar monkeys are not true monkeys at all, but a species of lorisid. The lithe little opportunists clamber among the high branches of the canopy, eating fruit, nuts, flower buds and insects, but also have a taste for bird and lizard eggs, taking them straight out of their nests at night. Burglar monkeys are not especially fast or possessing of impressive defenses like many of the island’s denizens. To avoid predators, they curl up in communal dens inside holes in trees during the day, emerging at dusk when their keen senses give them an edge.
  • The curious burglar monkeys are not true monkeys at all, but a species of lorisid. The lithe little opportunists clamber among the high branches of the canopy, eating fruit, nuts, flower buds and insects, but also have a taste for bird and lizard eggs, taking them straight out of their nests at night. Burglar monkeys are not especially fast or possessing of impressive defenses like many of the island’s denizens. To avoid predators, they curl up in communal dens inside holes in trees during the day, emerging at dusk when their keen senses give them an edge.
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