They go down to the ground about once a week to urinate and defecate, and go to the same spot all the time, where the sloths seem to find each other for breeding purposes. And females usually bear one baby sloth per year.
The strangest thing is that although sloths are slow creatures on land, they are very good and fast swimmers under the water. When do they go into the water? Well, we don't have the answer to that questions. Maybe it's when they want to take a bath?
[caption id="attachment_2142" align="alignleft" width="320" caption="Romance among the Sloths"]
If you are visiting the Southern Caribbean coast of Costa Rica be sure to stop in for a sloth tour at Aviarios del Caribe, a sloth sanctuary created to rehabilitate injured sloths. Here you learn all about sloths and their life cycles. And you get to visit with Buttercup, the first sloth to be brought into the sanctuary some sixteen years ago. Also see baby sloths being fed with eyedroppers by young volunteers who come here from different universities around the world to study this strange creature and it's environment.
Would you like to join a Sloth Club? Apparently there is one based in Japan with about seven hundred members. Sorry I don't have the link to get you in touch with the club. Just google sloth club Japan. The club's philosophy is based on this quiet, peaceful, efficient, and non violent creature.
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i love sloths and hate destuction of jungles. my favorite animals are sloths, orangutans, gibbons, gorillas and bonobos (not regular chimps, as they are too much like people). i am sick and tired that in usa (or any!)political campaigns, no mention is made of these darling relatives! there are too many people, and they destroy these nice animals. best wishes, and thanks for costa rica! can gibbons and/or orangutans be brought to costa rica to save them?
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