2 Sloths Touching Fingers
Sloths are having a moment right now in popular culture. Some would argue the slow-moving animals stole the show in the animated 'Ice Age' series, as well as in 2016's 'Zootopia.' Sloth Sanctuaries in Arizona Source: outofafricapark.com. There are 2 Sloth Sanctuaries in Arizona where you can view a sloth. One is the Out of Africa Wildlife Park in Camp Verde and the other is the Phoenix Zoo in Phoenix. Out of Africa Wildlife Park has an encounter with a sloth where you can see, feed, and possibly pet a sloth. / -^ s f"- ' - 1 1 ' 1 „ i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Figure 2. Behavioral thermoregulation by the three-toed sloth occurred between 0800 and 1000 when the cold sloth moved in the canopy of the rain forest in such a way as to increase light intensity at its body surface. See text for additional details. There is a suggestion that all sloths are three-toed because the front 'toes' are actually 'fingers'. The claws on the front feet are about 4 inches long, and can be used as a weapon when the sloth is cornered. The claws on all four limbs curve in toward the wrist creating four large, natural hooks. This disorder is a common cause of cold fingers. “Raynaud’s is a condition in which there is a narrowing of the blood vessels in the fingers—and sometimes the toes, ears, and nose—in.
- 2 Sloths Touching Fingers Pictures
- 2 Sloths Touching Fingers
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This is a list of Yoga mudras. In yoga, mudrās are used in conjunction with pranayama (yogic breathing exercises), generally while seated in Padmasana, Sukhasana or Vajrasana pose, to stimulate different parts of the body and mind, and to affect the flow of prana in the body.
Hasta (hand mudras)[edit]
Hasta mudras may be conducive for meditation, and help in internalization. Many hand mudrās evolved for use in rituals, especially within tantra. Others developed as iconographical symbols for depictions of deities in statues and paintings. Others were developed for non-verbal story telling in traditional dance. In the Hevajra Tantra hand mudrās are used to identify oneself to the goddesses at different holy sites.
Name in Sanskrit | Translation(s) in English | Other Meanings | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Anjali Mudra | Gesture of reverence | Offering; Prayer | Palms touching, fingers pointing upward. May be placed in front of the sternum, the forehead, or overhead. |
Dhyana Mudra | Psychic gesture of meditation | Upturned hands overlapping each other, usually right on top of left, with the thumbs touching. | |
Vāyu Mudra | Psychic gesture of air | Tip of index finger on the ball of the thumb, with thumb over the bent finger. Other three fingers are extended. | |
Shunya Mudra (or Shuni Mudra) | Psychic gesture of void or empty | Middle finger bent, with thumb over it. Other three fingers are extended. Sometimes, tip of the bent finger on the ball of the thumb. | |
Prithvi Mudra | Psychic gesture of earth | Ring finger bent, with thumb over it. Other three fingers are extended. | |
Varuna Mudra | Psychic gesture of Rain | Little finger bent, with thumb over it. Other three fingers are extended. | |
Shakti Mudra | Psychic gesture of power | Tips of little and ring fingers of both hands touching, with middle and index fingers folded. Sometimes, thumb folded towards the palm. | |
Hakini Mudra | Hand-steepling or finger-tenting: joining matching fingertips of right and left hands.[1] | ||
Prāna Mudra | Psychic gesture to activate life force energy | Tips of litte finger and ring fingers touch thumb. Other two fingers are extended.[2] | |
Apāna Mudra | Psychic gesture of life force | Tips of middle and ring fingers touch thumb. Other two fingers are extended. | |
Gyana Mudra (or Chin Mudra) | Psychic gesture of knowledge | Tip of index finger touches thumb, hand upturned. Other three fingers are extended. | |
Jnana Mudra | Psychic gesture of consciousness | Tip of index finger touches thumb, hand overturned. Other three fingers are extended. | |
Chinmaya Mudra | Pervaded by consciousness mudrā | Tip of thumb and index finger touching. Other three fingers are folded. | |
Yoni Mudra | Attitude of the womb or source | Hands touching by the tips of thumbs and index fingers. Other six fingers are either interlaced or folded and pressed together. | |
Bhairav Mudra | Fierce or terrifying attitude | Upturned hands overlapping each other, usually right on top of left. | |
Hridaya Mudra | Heart gesture | Index finger bent under the thumb. Middle and ring finger touching tip of thumb. Little finger extended. | |
Vishnu Mudra | Hand gesture of Lord Vishnu | Thumb, ring and little finger extended. Index and middle finger folded and touching pad of thumb. | |
Granthita Mudra | Knot gesture | Thumb and index fingers of each hand touch at tips and are interlaced, other fingers are interlaced and folded at the knuckles. | |
Mahasir Mudra | Great head gesture | Done with the right hand. Ring finger is curled into the palm. The tips of the index and middle finger touch the tip of the thumb. Little finger extended. |
Māna (head mudras)[edit]
Māna mudras are an important part of Kundalini yoga, and many are important meditation techniques in their own right.
Name in Sanskrit | Translation(s) in English | Other Meanings | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|
Shambhavi Mudra | Eyebrow centre gazing with eyes half-open | ||
Nasikagra Drishti | Nosetip gazing | ||
Khechari Mudra | Tongue lock | ||
Kaki mudra | The crow's beak | ||
Bhujangini Mudra | Cobra respiration | ||
Bhoochari Mudra | Gazing into nothingness | ||
Akashi mudra | Awareness of inner space | ||
Shanmukhi mudra | Closing the six gates | ||
Unmani Mudra | The attitude of mindlessness |
Kaya (postural mudras)[edit]
Kaya mudras combine physical postures with breathing and concentration.
Name in Sanskrit | Translation(s) in English | Other Meanings | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|
Prana Mudra | Energy (breath) seal | ||
Vipareeta Karani Mudra | Inverted seal | ||
Yoga Mudra | Union mudra | ||
Pashinee Mudra | Folded mudra | ||
Manduki Mudra | Gesture of the frog | ||
Tadagi Mudra | Barrelled abdomen technique |
Bandha (lock mudras)[edit]
Bandha mudras are a type of mudra performed on the three diaphragms (respiratory, vocal, and pelvic). They are used in conjunction with holding the breath (kumbhaka) during pranayama.
Name in Sanskrit | Translation(s) in English | Other Meanings | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|
Maha Mudra | Great mudra | ||
Uddiyana Bandha | Upward flying lock | ||
Mula Bandha | Root lock | ||
Jalandhara Bandha | Throat lock, waterholder lock, net lock |
Adhara (perineal mudras)[edit]
Adhara mudras are performed on the pelvic floor area and often relate to harnessing sexual energy.
Name in Sanskrit | Translation(s) in English | Other Meanings | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|
Ashwini Mudra | Horse gesture[3] | ||
Vajroli/Sahajoli Mudra | Thunderbolt/Spontaneous mudra | ||
Maha Bheda Mudra | The great separating mudra | ||
Maha Vedha Mudra | The great piercing mudra |
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^'Hakini Mudra for Brain Power'. Wellbeing Mantras. Retrieved 19 March 2016.
- ^https://chopra.com/articles/10-powerful-mudras-and-how-to-use-them
- ^'Ashwini Mudra and Abundant Siddhis'. Power Yoga Centre. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
Further reading[edit]
- Saraswati, Swami Satyananda. Asana Pranayama Mudra Bandha. Bihar Yoga Bharati, Munger, Bihar India. ISBN978-81-86336-14-4.
External links[edit]
- Media related to Mudras at Wikimedia Commons
The word 'sloth' means 'inclined to laziness and inaction', and the amazingly placid and extremely slow moving sloth would certainly appear to live up to its name.
The sloth is almost entirely arboreal, spending over 95 percent of its existence high up in the trees of Central and South America.
With the help of extremely specialized claws, sloths eat, sleep, breed and give birth all while dangling from the tallest branches of cecropia trees. Sloths come in two and three toed varieties and are related to anteaters, who have similarly formed long arching toenails.
Sloths exist on a diet almost entirely of leaves, which is such an inferior source of nutrition and energy that it shapes their whole lifestyle. They end up spending almost every waking moment quietly munching on leaves with little time for grooming or any other activities.
The lack of grooming leads the sloths dense coat to actually grow algae during the rainy season, giving them a greenish tinge.
Within the sloths belly is a sea of micro bacteria that help to breakdown and eventually digest what they eat. The process takes so long that a leaf consumed in August might not be eliminated until October.
With so much effort exerted to extract a minimum of nutrients, the sloths metabolism is amazingly slow- the slowest in the entire animal kingdom. - Sloth Facts
the sloths very special equipment
All of the sloth species have numerous amazing adaptions, not only for an arboreal life high in the trees, but also for a life lived in an inverted position.
Sloths do not build nests, instead they find a leafy area and simply fall asleep hanging completely upside down with all four limbs grasping a branch.
Three toed sloths rear legs, feet and claws are shorter than the front and both two-toed and three-toed sloths have three toes on the rear legs.
There is a suggestion that all sloths are three-toed because the front 'toes' are actually 'fingers'.
The claws on the front feet are about 4 inches long, and can be used as a weapon when the sloth is cornered. The claws on all four limbs curve in toward the wrist creating four large, natural hooks. Muscle power is not required for the sloth to grip branches, in fact sloths have about 30% less muscle mass than other mammals of equal size.
It is the construction of the claws and limbs, and a natural retraction of the ligaments that creates the 'gripping reflex' of the sloth. A sloth spends approximately 85% of its life hanging completely upside down, mainly because it requires no effort.
The entire sloth is designed for a life of inversion. All of its internal organs, including the heart, liver, spleen and stomach, are rearranged inside its body cavity so nothing gets crushed or obstructed.
Even the fur on the sloths torso and limbs grows in the opposite direction than it would in other animals with the follicles pointing up the arms and away from the belly so the hairs guide rain water and debris to the ground.
As an example of the effortlessness with which sloths dangle from the highest limbs, it is not uncommon for a sloth to pass away and remain securely hooked to its final branch. - Sloth Facts
sloth reproduction
So we know that the sloth is incredibly slow. It takes about a month to digest a leaf, about a minute to move 15 feet and about 6 hours to make it to the bathroom and back.
But there is one thing that sloths do with amazing speed, and that one thing is sex.
Sloth females come into heat about once a year and they let the whole neighborhood know it. Normally demure, a lady sloth in heat screams continually until a male finds her or her season passes.
She generally does not leave her own trees and just waits for a suitor to arrive. Then, once a gentleman makes his way up to her, it is basically first come first served without any posturing or foreplay.
In fact, the whole experience from first contact to completion of deed may only be a matter of seconds. In some species the male may stay for a day or two and there may be several matings, but in other species the male departs right after a single 6 second act of intercourse.
The mother sloth gives birth to one pup after about 4 months of pregnancy. The baby is born fully furred, eyes open, and generously clawed. It is basically a miniature adult without the fauna developed in its fur yet, of course.
The pup clings to its mothers belly most of the first few months of life and begins to munch on leaves at about 2 months old.
A baby sloth usually leaves its mother after a year or so, sometimes just moving a tree or two away, but generally has no contact with her once independent. - Sloth Facts
sloth evolution
Surprisingly, three-toed and two-toed sloths are actually not closely related.
The three-toed and the two-toed sloths are from two different families of animals, with their last known common ancestor having existed over 30 million years ago. That creature, most probably, lived on the ground.
So, although they appear to be very similar, they are better described as animals that evolved in the exact same way due to habitat, rather than being closely related. This is called convergent evolution and is a result of creatures changing in the same ways due to exposure to the same circumstances, and arriving at a very similar result that appears to be more closely related than it actually is.
In fact, the two-toed sloths actual closest relative is the now-extinct ground sloth. The ground sloths, including the gigantic megatherium or giant ground sloth existed throughout the southern United States up till about 10,000 years ago and was larger than an elephant.
These creatures probably lived in groups, as elephants do, and walked on all fours. They had curved claws like the modern sloths and walked on the sides of their feet like anteaters do, because the claws were over a foot long! - Sloth Facts
what's the difference between three-toed and two-toed sloths?
2 Sloths Touching Fingers Pictures
The three-toed sloth is kind of adorable, and has become a bit of an Internet darling. Most of the photos used in wallpapers and t-shirts are of either the brown-throated or pale-throated three-toed sloth.
These two species also have the characteristic dark eye patches that trail down to the neck. Three-toed sloths have fur on their faces, tiny, stumpy tails, three toes on both the front and rear feet, rear legs much shorter than front, and smaller noses than two-toed sloths.
The three-toed sloths also have extra neck vertebrae which allow them to swivel their heads 270 degrees around. Because of major skeletal differences like this, two-toed sloths are in a separate zoological family from three-toed.
Two=toed sloths are larger and faster and eat a more varied diet of fruits and insects along with leaves. This gives them a bit more energy than their smaller relatives, and they move about more freely in a larger range. Two-toeds have bare flesh on their faces, very large, wet noses, no visible tail (there is a tail vertebrae inside the body) and, of course, two toes on the front feet, three on the rear.
Two-toed sloth species are also completely nocturnal, sleeping motionless and almost invisible in the treetops all day long and not moving until after dark. There has been very little field research done on them for this reason, and so, as mysterious an animal as the three-toed sloth is, the two-toed sloth is an even deeper mystery.
Three-toed sloths spend some time active during early morning or dusk so can be observed more easily. The three-toed in particular, has a tremendously mat-like body of thick fur, that it never grooms.
The fur becomes home to both vegetation and insects. Entire colonies of moths may live in their fur, and algae and lichen grow abundantly - particularly in rainy season- providing exceptional camouflage.
Sloths have long, thick, sticky tongues covered in a carpet of tiny, rear-ward pointing spikes that they can pull leaves in with. They have a four-chambered stomach like a cow, to process all the vegetation, but short intestines that don't extract as much energy.
Their bodies do not regulate temperature effectively and they must move to sunny spots to warm up. In cold rainy weather their temperature drops and they become inactive. Cold spells can be dangerous for sloth populations because they must move about to eat, but can't get warm enough to move. - Sloth Facts
sloth lifestyle - pay it forward
2 Sloths Touching Fingers
Sloths live in very dense rain forest where the tops of mangrove, cecropia and trumpet trees form the famous 'canopy'- a tangle of branches that can allow a creature like the sloth, or other small arboreal animals like monkeys and lizards to travel sometimes for miles across the rain forest, treetop to treetop, without ever touching the ground.
Although their entire range may expand for several trees, there are many sloths, particularly the smaller, less active three-toed species that spend their entire lives in the limbs of just one single large tree.
Once every five to seven days the sloth will climb down to the ground and relieve itself at the base of the tree, burying its feces in basically the same area every time.
The buried stool breaks down quickly and provides excellent fertilizer for the parent tree.
2 Sloths Touching Fingers Numb
Although it is not known why they risk leaving the tree to defecate and don't simply relieve themselves from a branch, their habit of burying their stool at the roots of the tree they live in is an interesting example of the circle of life. - Sloth Facts.
a few more sloth facts
- The sloth has the slowest metabolism of any mammal on Earth.
- Sloths take about 25 days to digest one leaf.
- The ancestors of todays sloth were as big as African elephants
- Both two-toed and three-toed sloths have three toes on their hind limbs.
- The sloth takes a potty break only once a week
- Sloths sleep hanging completely upside-down
- The sloths fur is home to algae, lichen and even moths.
- The sloth turns green in the rainy season due to algae growing on its fur. - Sloth Facts
Scientific Classification:
- Phylum
- Class
- Order
- Suborder
- Family
- Genus
- Family
- Genus
SlothFacts-animalstats- | |||
---|---|---|---|
MALE | FEMALE | YOUNG | SOCIALUNIT |
male | female | pup | solitary |
GROUP | HOME | LIFESPAN | FAVORITEFOOD |
bed | Centraland SouthAmerica | 25-35years | leaves |
TAIL | AVG.HEIGHT | AVG.LENGTH | AVG.WEIGHT |
noneor 2 inches | 12- 20 inches | 19- 30 inches | 8- 20 pounds |
DIFFERENCEBETWEEN 2 and 3 TOED | ENEMIES | ||
2-toedlarger, faster,nocturnal, lacks tail | jaguar,boa | ||
TOPSPEED | GESTATION | BIRTHWEIGHT | ATBIRTH: |
15ft/minute | 120-150days | 8- 9 ounces | sighted,furred, fully alert |
RAISEDBY | #OF YOUNG | EYESOPEN | BABYCLIMBS |
mother | 1 | atbirth | immediately |
WEANED | INDEPENDENT | MATURITY | ENDANGERED? |
2- 4 years | 1year | 2- 3 years | lowconcern |
2 Sloths Touching Fingers Emoji
see more animal extreme closeups
2 Sloths Touching Fingers Crossed
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