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Kinkajou

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The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Kinkajou

 

(Potos flavus), a predatory mammal of the family Procyonidae. Body length, 41–57 cm; tail length, 40–50 cm; weight, 1.5–2.7 kg.

The head of the kinkajou is round, the snout short, and the tail long and prehensile. The dense, velvety fur is grayish yellow above and reddish yellow on the underside; the snout is dark brown or blackish. Representatives of the group are found in southern North America (southern Mexico), Central America, and South America (south of Mato Grosso in Brazil). The kinkajou climbs trees with ease, grasping with its tail and paws. It is a nocturnal animal, feeding primarily on fruit (the damage it does to fruit plantations is insignificant) but also on insects, small animals, and bird eggs. The kinkajou is unipararous (two young are rare), giving birth in spring or summer. When caught at an early age, kinkajous are easily domesticated. The pelts are used for handbags and belts.

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
The product is named after the kinkajou, a small mammal native to the rainforests of South America, that is around the size of a cat but has four oversized teeth.
The kinkajou, which is also known as a honey bear and is similar to a racoon, had previously bitten Paris during a shopping trip in LA in December.
Eliot's strange creatures, "the Kinkajou" and "the mangabey" make a mango grove their home.
That's the sound you would hear if you snuck up on a kinkajou (KINK-UH-joo).
They can visit the tiger, giraffe, or elephant bedrooms, look into the nursery-or with a guide, have a close encounter with a binturong, owl, or kinkajou. (And sometimes visitors can still meet King Tut, the recently retired official zoo greeter.
Soon the raccoon line divided further into the Old World raccoons (ancestors of the lesser panda) and New World raccoons (ancestors of the raccoon, coati, olingo and kinkajou).
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It's part of a wider Kinkajou Pop Up Jazz Cafe event organised by Liverpool's Anti Social Jazz Club, running in the Buyers Club from Thursday, November 2, to Sunday, November 5.
sp., a new ascarid nematode isolated from captive kinkajou, Potos flavus, from the Cooperative Republic of Guyana.
Excluding Potos flavus (kinkajou) and the unidentified rodent, all species were diurnal, although the highland guan was also active during sunrise (0500-0600h) and sunset (1800-1900h) hours (with eight independent events recorded for this species during sunrise and 25 during sunset).
LOOK AT ME J Being out-posed by kinkajou. Main pic, in yoga pose
In early April 2010, a pet kinkajou aged 10 weeks was seen by a veterinarian in rural, northeast Tennessee for a routine health examination.
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