The aye aye inhabits the forested and jungle areas of the east side of Madagascar, but the aye aye is also commonly found in bamboo thickets and are occasionally found hunting on the ground.
Aye Aye Foot Facts
- The aye aye has large feet in comparison to their body which the aye aye uses to hang itself from tree branches whilst foraging for food.
- The aye aye medium length fingers that have claws on the ends of them that help the aye aye to grip onto branches when its hanging on the trees.
- The aye aye has an extra long and specially adapted middle finger on each hand which has a nail on the end, which the aye aye uses to remove grubs from rotting wood.
- The movement of the aye ayes long middle finger is independent from the other fingers and means that the aye aye is even able to use this finger to drink liquids by moving it quickly between the liquid and the mouth of the aye aye.
- The aye aye moves by walking on all four feet and is able to walk and climb well and is extremely adept at leaping between branches in the trees.
Aye Aye Teeth Facts
- The aye aye uses its sharp front teeth to tear into wood before using the special middle finger to dig the grubs out from beneath.
- The aye aye has sharp incisor teeth at the front of its mouth that grow continuously so that they never wear down.
- The sharp front teeth of the aye aye must be ground down all the time to prevent them from getting too big and the aye aye does this by gnawing on nearly everything it finds.
- The aye aye uses the long middle finger to tap all the way along a tree branch until it hears what it is looking for and then uses the chisel-like teeth to bite a hole in the wood.
- The aye aye is thought to have 25 teeth including the sharp front incisors and the sets of molars that the aye aye uses to chew the food before it eats it.