Article 6EN7J A Lesser Anteater Sticks Out His Really Long Tongue to Reach Ants at the Bottom of a Tube

A Lesser Anteater Sticks Out His Really Long Tongue to Reach Ants at the Bottom of a Tube

by
Lori Dorn
from Laughing Squid on (#6EN7J)
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@sandiegozoo

Ain't nobody tryna see you Otis (yes they are) #tamandua #animalsoftiktok #sandiegozoo

? original sound - San Diego Zoo

A little tamandua (lesser anteater) named Otis who lives at the San Diego Zoo showed off his incredibly long tongue to root out some ants at the bottom of a tube. His keeper explained what makes these animals so unique.

His tongue is 16 inches long and is covered in tiny little barbs and really sticky saliva, I mean crazy sticky. And his mouth is only about as big around as a pencil.

Here's more information about the tamanduas at the San Diego Zoo.

The tamandua (pronounced tuh MAN doo wah) is a type of anteater and is often called a lesser anteater because it is much smaller than its relative, the giant anteater. A specialized mouth and tongue enables tamanduas to eat up to 9,000 ants in a single day! Their sticky, barbed-tongues are 16-inches-long (41 centimeters) and perfect for slurping up tiny insects. The lesser anteater's thick, coarse fur protects them from angry ants trying to bite their skin while they dine.

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