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Animal Directory Featured species in the planned Tropical Rainforest Dome habitat

Linnaeus's Two-toed Sloth portrait

Linnaeus's Two-toed Sloth

Choloepus didactylus

LC
  • Spends almost its entire life upside down in the canopy; its organs are anchored to the rib cage so they don't press on the lungs.
  • Moves so slowly that algae grow in grooves along its fur, giving it a green tint and camouflaging it from harpy eagles overhead.
  • Comes down from the tree only about once a week to defecate at the base — a behaviour scientists are still puzzling over.
  • Can rotate its head almost 270 degrees thanks to extra vertebrae in its neck, giving it a wide field of view without moving its body.
  • IUCN lists the species as Least Concern with a stable population across northern South America.

The Two-toed Sloth occupies the planned Tropical Rainforest Dome’s mid-canopy, the Sloth Sanctuary marked on the zone map. Its role in the visit is deliberate counter-programming: after the macaws and the toucan blaze, the sloth offers a moment of complete stillness.

IUCN status sourced from the Linnaeus’s Two-toed Sloth (Choloepus didactylus) assessment (Moraes-Barros et al., 2014) on the IUCN Red List — listed as Least Concern with a stable population trend.

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