217
forest wildlife
AtlAs moth
the atlas moth is one of the largest
moths in the world, with a wingspan
of 12 in (30 cm). today, atlas moths
are rare. In the past, people killed
thousands of them simply for their
butterfly collections.
lemur
there are
about 72
species of lemur.
they are primates,
so they are closely
related to monkeys, and they live
in trees in madagascar, an island
off the east coast of Africa. mouse
lemurs weigh only 2 oz (60 gm).
Ground
ginger is a spice
made from the
root of the
ginger plant,
which came
originally
from the
forests of Asia.
sloth
Few animals move more slowly
than the sloths of Central and south
America. they hang from branches with
their curved claws and eat leaves. Algae
grows in their coats, giving them a green
hue. this helps camouflage the
sloths among the trees.
touCAn
With its large, light bill, this
plate-billed mountain toucan is an
excellent berry picker. During the
mating season, the male feeds
fruits to the female before they form a
pair. there are 4 species of mountain
toucans, and they are all found
in tropical south America.
toucans nest in tree holes
and eat fruits, birds’ eggs,
insects, frogs, and lizards.
PoIson ArroW Frog
It is so damp in rain forests that
frogs spend their lives in the
trees. the female frog lays
its eggs on land. When
the eggs hatch, the
frog carries them
to pools of rain that
collect on leaves,
fungi, and in flowers
such as bromeliads,
which grow on trees.
Poison Arrow frogs live
in the rain forests of south
America. their bright colors
warn predators of the deadly
poison in their skin.
troPICAl Forests
In tropical forests, the climate is
much the same all year round.
the wide range of
habitats make tropical rain forests
some of the richest places for
wildlife. there are many more
species of trees than in any other
kind of forest, and thousands
more kinds of animals.
Atlas moth resting on
a bromeliad flower
tAnAger
the paradise tanager is a noisy,
active bird that lives high up in the
rain forest canopy. Paradise
tanagers keep their bright
plumage all year and flutter
from tree to tree in
search of insects and
ripe fruit.
Several kinds of frogs,
lizards, snakes, and squirrels
have evolved, or developed, ways of
gliding through the air from a high branch
to escape from predators or
to reach food. The gliding
snake flattens its ribs as
it leaps, to make a
streamlined ribbon shape.
Leaf roller
ants curl up
leaves on the
forest floor and join
the edges into a tube
to make a nesting site.
ConservAtIon
As the forests are cut down or burned, animals
lose their homes. tree-living creatures such as
this bald uakari from south America are most at
risk. they depend on the seeds of hard fruits
from rain forest trees. Worldwide conservation
organizations are trying to stop the destruction
of the rain forests in order to save monkeys and
thousands of other creatures.
PArrot
the male and
female eclectus parrots
shown here are so differently
colored that for many years
people believed
they were
two different species of birds. these
parrots live in the forests of new
guinea and Australia. like all parrots,
they have large bills for cracking seeds.
Find out more
Animals
Birds
Butterflies and moths
Conservation
and endangered species
Frogs and other amphibians
US_217_Forest_wildlife_2.indd 217 12/02/16 5:39 pm