Millions of fans mourned online the death of a lemur that starred in the PBS show “Zoboomafoo” and helped introduce a generation of Americans to the beady-eyed primate group, the Duke Lemur Center in ...
Zoboomafoo, the lovable, leaping lemur who co-starred with the Kratt brothers on PBS, died this week at the Duke Lemur Center. He was 20 years old. Christopher Smith, an education specialist at the ...
“Mangatsika!,” as Zooboomafoo, the friendly, leaping lemur might say. If you’ve ever watched the hit PBS television show Zoboomafoo, you’d know that “Mangatsika” in Zoboo-speak means, “I can’t believe ...
Marie nestles into a stuffed penguin during a routine wellness exam by DLC veterinarians. The tiny sifaka is the granddaughter of Jovian, star of the Kratt brothers’ beloved PBS children’s show ...
Jovian, the energetic and cartoon-like lemur who starred on the PBS show “Zoboomafoo,” died almost six years ago. But his family keeps growing. Zoboomafoo’s nephew and grandson were born a day apart ...
The Duke Lemur Center is welcoming a new batch of babies, including the niece of perhaps the most famous lemur of all. Nine new babies have been born at the Duke Lemur Center so far this year.
If Zoboomafoo is successful at doing one thing, it's working as an advertisement for the children's TV show on PBS. If Zoboomafoo is successful at doing one thing, it's working as an advertisement for ...
DURHAM, N.C. — The Coqerel’s sifaka, a kind of lemur, is critically endangered — but now there’s one more in the world! The Duke Lemur Center in Durham announced the good news Thursday, adding ...
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