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LEMURS. 
apart, leading to the supposition that, by some arrangement of the sockets of the 
teeth, they could be moved so far without breaking. The haikay brings forth one 
at a birth, in which the long claw is fully developed.” 
It has been observed that captive aye-ayes are very partial to the juice of 
the sugar-cane, which they obtain by ripping up the canes with their front teeth; 
and since sugar-cane grows wild in Madagascar, we may infer that its juice forms 
a part of the food of these animals in their wild state. It is, therefore, probable that 
the diet of the aye-aye is a mixed one, consisting partly of grubs, partly of the 
juices of plants, partly of fruit; but whether birds or their eggs also form a part 
of the bill of fare must be left for future observers to determine. The favourite 
haunts of these animals appear to be the bamboo-brakes, which form such a large 
portion of the forests in some regions of the island. 
the tarsier according to GUILLEMARD. (From The Cruise of the Marchesa.) 
