Sloths
The living sloths comprise six species of medium-sized
mammals that live in Central and South America belonging to the
families Megalonychidae and Bradypodidae, part of the order
Pilosa. Most scientists call the sloth suborder Folivora, while
some call it Phyllophaga. Both names mean "leaf-eaters"; the
first is derived from Latin, the second from ancient Greek.
Tribal names include Ritto, Rit and Ridette, mostly forms of the
word "sleep", "eat" and "dirty" from Tagaeri tribe of Huaorani.
This article mainly deals with the living tree-dwelling sloths.
Until geologically recent times, large ground sloths such as
Megatherium[2] lived in South America and parts of North America,
but along with many other animals they disappeared immediately
after the arrival of humans on the continent.[citation needed]
Much evidence suggests that human hunting contributed to the
extinction of the American megafauna, like that of far northern
Asia, Australia, New Zealand, and Madagascar. Simultaneous
climate change that came with the end of the last Ice age may
have also played a role in some cases. However, the fact that
ground sloths survived on the Antilles long after they had died
out on the mainland points towards human activities as the
agency of extinction. |