Three-toed sloth in Costa Rica
© Harry Collins/Getty Image
Hanging in there. International Sloth Day
The world's slowest mammal takes the spotlight today on International Sloth Day. Celebrated on October 20, it highlights their lives, conservation efforts, and the threats they face, including shrinking habitats. There are six living sloth species, divided into two types: three-toed sloths and two-toed sloths.
Today's image features the laid-back, tree-loving, three-toed sloth, found in the tropical regions of South and Central America. With three clawed toes on each limb, they cling onto branches with ease. Sloths are mainly leaf eaters, and to help them break down tough, fibrous leaves, they have a special multi-chambered stomach. With their super slow metabolism, digestion takes its sweet time, and they don't need much food each day to get by. They're so slow-moving that algae often develop on their fur, giving a greenish tint that provides them camouflage.
American black bear cub in spring, Shenandoah National Park, Virginia
Hoffmann's two-toed sloth mother and young, Puerto Viejo de Talamanca, Costa Rica
Pygmy three-toed sloth baby, Isla Escudo de Veraguas, Panama
Koala mother and 8-month-old joey, Queensland, Australia
A bearded emperor tamarin monkey carrying a baby
Brown-throated three-toed sloth in Manuel Antonio National Park, Costa Rica
A koala sleeping in a eucalyptus tree, Australia
Pale-throated sloth perched in a tree on Sloth Island, near Bartica on the Essequibo River, Guyana