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New video of giant pangolins shows these bizarre scaly creatures in their natural (nocturnal) habitat in Uganda.
In the videos, the blunt-nosed creatures — which are the only mammals with scales — are seen meandering about the undergrowth, sniffing for food and danger. In one clip, a baby pangolin rides on its mother's back. In another, a pangolin shimmies partway up a tree trunk. Another pangolin gets (rather adorably) tangled in a stick and marches off with the vegetation wrapped around its torso. [Pangolin Photos: Scaly Mammals Threatened with Extinction]
The videos were collected by researchers from Chester Zoo in the United Kingdom, alongside Rhino Fund Uganda (RFU). Though, as the name implies, that organization works to protect rhinoceroses in Uganda, rangers working for RFU kept running across giant pangolins while on patrol. When the Chester Zoo approached the organization about studying the creatures, the RFU staff jumped at the opportunity, according to a statement.
A giant pangolin is caught on camera in Uganda. (Image credit: Chester Zoo)But pangolins are threatened: The International Union for Conservation of Nature lists the animals as "vulnerable." That's in part because climate change is altering their habitat and in part because humans hunt the animals both for food and to sell on the black market. (In traditional Chinese medicine, pangolin scales have long been used to treat a laundry list of ailments.)
Giant pangolins eat insects; they slurp up creepy-crawly meals with their long, anteater-like tongues. But other than that fact, little is known about pangolins' habits, given their secretive, nocturnal lifestyles. The Chester Zoo and RFU have now installed 70 motion-sensor cameras in Uganda's Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary to detect giant pangolin movements. Researchers are also on the lookout for footprints, burrows and dung. The scientists are collecting the latter to study the animals' genetics and diet.
The Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary is the only area in Uganda where rhinoceroses (specifically, the southern white rhino subspecies) roam free. Other animals that call the sanctuary home include parrots, cranes and the fearsome shoebill stork (Balaeniceps rex), which grows as tall as 55 inches (140 centimeters) and sports a massive, bone-crushing beak.
Image Gallery: Evolution's Most Extreme MammalsIn Images: 100 Most Threatened Animals10 Species Success StoriesOriginally published on Live Science.