![]() 01/24/2014 at 23:51 • Filed to: None | ![]() | ![]() |
![]() 01/24/2014 at 23:57 |
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You had to show that right before I went to bed, didn't you?
DIDN'T YOU?!
![]() 01/25/2014 at 00:05 |
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They are so cute and happy to get a bug on a stick!
![]() 01/25/2014 at 00:05 |
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Maybe.
![]() 01/25/2014 at 00:07 |
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Lol their eyes are the best
![]() 01/25/2014 at 00:09 |
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*that awesome feeling of revenge
![]() 01/25/2014 at 00:12 |
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God, I want a tarsier.
or a bushbaby. Either one has sufficient levels of adorable.
![]() 01/25/2014 at 00:14 |
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All manliness left my body when I saw that
![]() 01/25/2014 at 02:52 |
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yup. exactly. they convey surprise, excitement and joy all at once.
![]() 01/25/2014 at 07:07 |
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I'd settle for a bug on a stick right now! Gotta' get some breakfast.
![]() 01/25/2014 at 09:04 |
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Tarsiers are incredibly interesting primates. Because of their physical similarities to several types of lemurs, it was thought that tarsiers were more closely related to lemurs and lorises and were put in the prosimian suborder. However, after extensive DNA testing, it was concluded that they are genetically more closely related to primates in the anthropoid suborder. This finding caused an upheaval in the taxonomic scientific community which ultimately lead to a complete and total re-ordering of the primate taxonomy with lemurs and lorises being placed in the brand new strepsirrhine suborder and tarsiers being placed in the new haplorrhine suborder along with monkeys (both old and new world), apes, and humans. The taxonomic terms prosimian and anthropoid are no longer officially used.
Tarsiers also really love sticks.
![]() 01/25/2014 at 22:54 |
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"Keeping Oppo Weird"? Yes, you win.