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(music playing)
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Pygmy sloths are this
really incredible species.
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They're only found on a single
island in the whole world.
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It's an island called Escudo de Veraguas
and that's off the coast of Panama.
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Now what makes them really special
is that they're really small,
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hence the name pygmy, and they're
about 40% the size of a typical sloth.
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So if you think of a normal sloth
being the size of a dog or something,
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these guys are tiny. Pygmy sloths
are classified as critically endangered
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and that's because they're
isolated to just one single island.
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The population of pygmy
sloths is actually unknown
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because it's actually really
hard to find them in the forest.
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I mean they're camouflaged
and they're really good at hiding.
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So we're not really sure
how many of them exist
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but we think there's probably
no more than a few hundred.
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So what I'm trying to do is study them in
the forest and see just how many there are
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so we can understand if the population
is increasing or decreasing
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because unfortunately there is a lot
of deforestation going on on the island.
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One of the biggest discoveries that
I've made so far is by radio-collaring
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pygmy sloths, I found that
they're not only in the mangroves
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as originally thought but they
actually are in the forest.
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This is important because previously
scientists thought that you only find
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pygmy sloths in the mangroves
which means if there's only five or so
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on the island mangroves, that's a
tiny percentage of the island
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that's habitable land for them.
Now I'm finding them in the forest
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which means that instead of 100 maybe
pygmy sloths there could be up to 1,000
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of them which is good news
for the population of pygmy sloths.
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The most challenging part of this
whole operation is actually finding and
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catching a sloth. In order to catch it,
I have to climb up the tree and get it.
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I shoot a rope up in the tree, I climb
the rope and then I just kind of reach out
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and slowly grab the sloth and then
bring it down to the ground.
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But it's actually really tricky
because a sloth can move
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about as fast as you can walk,
which doesn't seem like much,
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but when it's 110 feet up in the trees,
by the time I climb up there,
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the sloth has seen me
and might be two trees over
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and that requires me to go down,
to reposition my ropes
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and to do that whole thing over again.
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So actually, I get outrun and
out-smarted by sloths all the time.
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One interesting thing that I found
by looking at them and researching them
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is that actually, they seem to have
a lot of babies which is a good sign.
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So I feel like this is a very healthy
and robust population
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but it still has definite major challenges
and is facing threats from people cutting
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down trees and also
burning parts of the island.
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So it's important to keep
an eye on it but I think overall
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this is a pretty good
sign for the population.