- Myrmecophaga Giant
anteater 
•    Anteaters are characterised by long tapering snouts, tubular mouth, without
teeth and long sticky protrusible tongue for capturing ants and termites which
are swallowed whole.
•    Their forefeet have long, sharp claws for digging the anthills.
- Dasypus Armadillo •  Dasypus novemcinctus, the nine-banded armadillo is found in
N. America, Central and S. America.
•    These are the only living mammals that have bony plates in their skin.
The plates are intercepted by hair.
•    At the time of danger, it rolls up into a ball for protection. It is nocturnal,
scavenger and lives in burrows.
•    It shows polyembryony in which one zygote produces four to eight young ones
of the same sex.
•    Mycobacterium leprae (bacteria which cause leprosy) can grow in Armadillo.
Pholidota 
- Manis Pangolin •     Scaly anteaters or pangolins have their home in tropical Asia and Africa and
belong to the single genus Manis.
•    They live on ground, in burrows or in trees and range from 30 cm to
1.5 metres in length.
•    They have a long, sticky, extensile tongue with muscular roots, used for feeding
on termites or white ants. It does not have teeth.
•    When attacked, they roll themselves into a ball for defence, like Armadillos.
Primates 
- Lemur Lemur •    They are most abundant in Madagascar and neighbouring islands and are
regarded to be the lowest primates.
•    Tail is long and non-prehensile.
•    Vision is poor.
•    It feeds mostly on plants and small animals. 
- Loris Loris •    Lorises are found outside Madagascar.
•    They are arboreal, nocturnal and have a tooth comb.
•    They also eat fruits and small animals. However, they are tailless, move slowly
and often hang upside down. 
- Macaca Rhesus
monkey 
•    One of the best known Old World monkeys is the rhesus monkey or ‘bandar‘,
Macaca mulatta.
•    It is common in northern India, southern China and Indochina (Vietnam).
•    It is widely used in biological investigations. The Rh blood factor was first
discovered in these monkeys.
•    It has simple stomach and large cheek pouches for storing food.
- Hylobates Gibbon •   Gibbon is the smallest and cleanest of all apes. It is found in the rain forests of
Assam, S.E. Asia and Indonesia.
•    It lives almost entirely on trees swinging rapidly from branch to branch by its
long arms and famous for its acrobatics.
•    It is frugivorous.
•    Gibbons live in pairs and make loud territorial calls. 
- Pongo Orangutan •    Confined to the low-lying forests of Sumatra and Borneo.
•    Orangutan means ‘man of the woods‘.
•    Body is 1.5 metres high with long arms, short legs and long shaggy red hair.
•    It is mainly arboreal, feeding on buds and fruits. It constructs a sort of nest on
tree top for living. On ground, it walks on its feet and knuckles.