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kinkajou
(redirected from Kinkajoo)

   Also found in: Medical, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.03 sec.
kinkajou (kĭng`kəj'), nocturnal, arboreal mammal, Potos flavus, found from Mexico to Brazil and related to the raccoon raccoon, nocturnal New World mammal of the genus Procyon. The common raccoon of North America, Procyon lotor, also called coon, is found from S Canada to South America, except in parts of the Rocky Mts. and in deserts.
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. It has a long, slender body with soft, short, woolly hair of any of various shades of brown or yellow. Its tail is prehensile and is used to grasp branches when the animal climbs. Kinkajous also have a long extrudable tongue, possibly used to reach nectar and honey. The kinkajou spends most of its time in trees. It eats insects, fruits, and honey and is sometimes called honey-bear, a name also applied to a true bear bear, large mammal of the family Ursidae in the order Carnivora, found almost exclusively in the Northern Hemisphere. Bears have large heads, bulky bodies, massive hindquarters, short, powerful limbs, very short tails, and coarse, thick fur.
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 of SE Asia. Kinkajous are classified in the phylum Chordata Chordata (kôrdā`tə,–dä`–)
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, subphylum Vertebrata, class Mammalia, order Carnivora, family Procyonidae.

Bibliography

See D. MacClintock and E. Young, Phoebe the Kinkajou, (1985).


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