We hate to break it to you, but the affable grin on this pale-throated sloth is probably not due to its laid-back lifestyle. Our adorable tree hugger looks content thanks to its facial mask and the natural shape of its mouth. Spotting one of these slow-moving solitary animals takes a little skill. The thick outer layer of a sloth"s coat is an ideal growing medium for green algae, which forms a natural camouflage in the canopy of tropical forests here in northern South America. If you do spot a pale-throated sloth it will likely be enjoying a simple meal of leaves, limbs, and tree buds. Because sloths don"t have incisors, they spend most of their waking hours smacking their lips together "to chew" their food. This would drive most animals to starvation (if not culinary madness), but the sloth"s metabolism is so slow that it"s evolved to survive on less food.
Meet the slowest flirt in the animal world
Today in History
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Oktoberfest begins!
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National Trails Day
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Birds of a feather
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Native American Heritage Month
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An impactful day
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Happy Thanksgiving!
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Birds and bees, and why they re so important
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A night on the (ghost) town
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A path to access
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‘The memory of Abraham Lincoln is enshrined forever’
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Sweetheart Abbey, Scotland
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Tesla, the visionary
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Celebrating Charles Darwin
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Rethymno, Crete, Greece
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Why’s it called a spelling ‘bee,’ anyhow?
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Manarola, Cinque Terre National Park, Liguria, Italy
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Rocks on the move
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The Aomori Nebuta Festival parade, Japan
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Minnesota State Capitol in St. Paul, Minnesota
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World Turtle Day
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An ancient sailing tradition takes to the water
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A lunar lantern celebration
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Night of the ‘Cold Moon’
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A lush, green escape
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Totally Thames Festival, London
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Frozen beauty
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National Take a Hike Day
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Alpine marmots at Hohe Tauern National Park, Austria
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Laguna de Torrevieja, Spain
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Gamboa Crater, Mars
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