Videos Tagged With "duke lemur center" RSS
The Day a Lemur Got Stuck in a Tree
Lemurs live in the trees, but one day, one lemur became afraid to come down! See what happens when a lemur at the Duke Lemur Center is scared of heights! Watch the daring rescue!Published 1 month ago
Lemurs Gone Wild at Duke
Meet the lemurs at the Duke University Lemur Center. Video by News & Observer staff photojournalist Chuck Liddy.
Published 1 month ago
Hibernation Isn't Just for Bears
Two new species of dwarf lemurs have been found hibernating during the lean months of winter in Eastern Magascar. Scientific Reports, May 2, 2013. An interview with researcher Marina Blanco, PhD, with footage from field research and still images from the Duke Lemur Center. See story here: http://today.duke.edu/2013/05/hibernation
Published 1 month ago
#OneDayatDuke The Science of Scent with Duke's Lemurs
All content (even the voiceovers!) captured on April 19 as a part of Duke University's One Day at Duke event.
Music Attribution:
DLDN Instrumental" by timberman (feat. Onlymeith, Mellotroniac)
http://ccmixter.org/files/Per/24866
is licensed under a Creative Commons license:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
Published 1 month ago
What's the Word - 4:2/13
DSB News' Grace Oathout and Lavanya Sunder recap the week that was at Duke.
Published 2 months ago
Just Lemur-ing Around!
Ring-tailed lemurs at the Duke Lemur Center in Durham, North Carolina, free-ranging in the fall leaves.Published 7 months ago
Baby Lemurs at Duke Lemur Center
This video follows the progress of a baby aye aye born at the Duke Lemur Center. A brief introduction describes the Center's research and conservation efforts in raising Aye Ayes and lemurs in Durham, North Carolina.Published 1 year ago
Duke Lemur Night Time Antics (BBC)
The Duke Lemur Center's aye-ayes eat boiled eggs and get up to mischief at night time.
Posted 1 year ago
Contraceptives Change Lemur Mating Behavior (WSJ Online)
Hormonal contraceptives change the ways captive ring-tailed lemurs relate to one another both socially and sexually, according to a Duke University study that combined analyses of hormones, genes, scent chemicals and behavior. Professor Christine Drea explains the study's findings to Wall Street Journal reporter Shirley Wang. https://today.duke.edu/2010/07/wrongsmell.html
Posted 2 years ago
Could Lemurs Provide Link to Our Past? (CNN)
Associate professor Elizabeth Brannon says lemurs could offer insight into our ancestors' intelligence.Posted 2 years ago
Duke Lemur Center: Baby Blue-Eyed Lemur
Duke Lemur Center's baby blue-eyed black lemur is torn between enjoying a tasty meal and satisfying her curiosity about the camera. Choices! Choices!Published 3 years ago