southern lesser galago gift card
The Southern Lesser Galago is shown in the woodland it moves through at night. The envelope places it among branches, hollows, bark, leaves, insects, and flowering trees, because this animal cannot be understood apart from the canopy it uses.
After dark, it travels fixed routes between sleeping sites, feeding trees, and safe cover. It feeds on insects, gum, nectar, and fruit, and in doing so helps keep insect life in check while carrying plant matter through the woodland. Its movement is small, but repeated night after night, it forms part of the working rhythm of the trees.
On the back of the card, its South African names are recorded alongside its role in the ecosystem and a map of where it occurs.
Status: Concern (C)
Scientific name: Galago moholi
South African names: Nagapie (Afrikaans), Bushbaby (English), Impukunyoni (isiNdebele), Isinkwe (isiZulu), Maselale-ntlwê (Sesotho), Mogwele (Setswana)
Singwe (siSwati), Tshimondi (Tshivenda), Mhimbi (XiTsonga)
♻️ PAP 21 (paper collection)
The Southern Lesser Galago is shown in the woodland it moves through at night. The envelope places it among branches, hollows, bark, leaves, insects, and flowering trees, because this animal cannot be understood apart from the canopy it uses.
After dark, it travels fixed routes between sleeping sites, feeding trees, and safe cover. It feeds on insects, gum, nectar, and fruit, and in doing so helps keep insect life in check while carrying plant matter through the woodland. Its movement is small, but repeated night after night, it forms part of the working rhythm of the trees.
On the back of the card, its South African names are recorded alongside its role in the ecosystem and a map of where it occurs.
Status: Concern (C)
Scientific name: Galago moholi
South African names: Nagapie (Afrikaans), Bushbaby (English), Impukunyoni (isiNdebele), Isinkwe (isiZulu), Maselale-ntlwê (Sesotho), Mogwele (Setswana)
Singwe (siSwati), Tshimondi (Tshivenda), Mhimbi (XiTsonga)
♻️ PAP 21 (paper collection)
The Southern Lesser Galago is shown in the woodland it moves through at night. The envelope places it among branches, hollows, bark, leaves, insects, and flowering trees, because this animal cannot be understood apart from the canopy it uses.
After dark, it travels fixed routes between sleeping sites, feeding trees, and safe cover. It feeds on insects, gum, nectar, and fruit, and in doing so helps keep insect life in check while carrying plant matter through the woodland. Its movement is small, but repeated night after night, it forms part of the working rhythm of the trees.
On the back of the card, its South African names are recorded alongside its role in the ecosystem and a map of where it occurs.
Status: Concern (C)
Scientific name: Galago moholi
South African names: Nagapie (Afrikaans), Bushbaby (English), Impukunyoni (isiNdebele), Isinkwe (isiZulu), Maselale-ntlwê (Sesotho), Mogwele (Setswana)
Singwe (siSwati), Tshimondi (Tshivenda), Mhimbi (XiTsonga)
♻️ PAP 21 (paper collection)
The Southern Lesser Galago is shown in the woodland it moves through at night. The envelope places it among branches, hollows, bark, leaves, insects, and flowering trees, because this animal cannot be understood apart from the canopy it uses.
After dark, it travels fixed routes between sleeping sites, feeding trees, and safe cover. It feeds on insects, gum, nectar, and fruit, and in doing so helps keep insect life in check while carrying plant matter through the woodland. Its movement is small, but repeated night after night, it forms part of the working rhythm of the trees.
On the back of the card, its South African names are recorded alongside its role in the ecosystem and a map of where it occurs.
Status: Concern (C)
Scientific name: Galago moholi
South African names: Nagapie (Afrikaans), Bushbaby (English), Impukunyoni (isiNdebele), Isinkwe (isiZulu), Maselale-ntlwê (Sesotho), Mogwele (Setswana)
Singwe (siSwati), Tshimondi (Tshivenda), Mhimbi (XiTsonga)
♻️ PAP 21 (paper collection)