How does a bearded tamarin celebrate Father"s Day? Maybe by giving piggyback rides to pint-sized monkeys. From day one, both male and female bearded emperor tamarin babies (like the one hitching a ride in this photo), start growing their trademark handlebar mustaches and wispy beards. These diminutive residents of the Amazon basin are highly social animals. Females often give birth to twins and stay pretty busy during the day nursing them. After the babies are fed, the males watch over the youngsters by carrying them around on their backs. By the time the young tamarins reach two months old their pops become the primary caregivers, providing food and showing the ropes of the rainforest to their young charges—where to find fruit and nectar in the dry season, how to leap from branch to branch, and the best ways to groom those outrageous mustaches and beards.
Grab onto the handlebars, kid
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Rapa Nui National Park, Easter Island, Chile
-
Ready, set, read
-
Mid-Autumn Festival
-
World Theater Day
-
Tufa formations in Mono Lake, California
-
The Colosseum of Rome, Italy
-
Life in the slow lane
-
Loud waters
-
Dancing in The Nutcracker
-
Grandparents Day
-
Aerial view of Plaza Mayor, Madrid, Spain
-
Mont-Saint-Michel
-
Boxing Day
-
St. Paul Winter Carnival
-
And the skies filled with bats…
-
Grand Canyon National Park turns 105
-
National Roller Coaster Day
-
Indigenous Peoples Day
-
International Jazz Day
-
Lençóis Maranhenses National Park in Brazil
-
A holiday beacon of light
-
Go climb a tree
-
World Sea Turtle Day
-
International Day of the World s Indigenous Peoples
-
What s better than a smile?
-
Arctic fox in Norway
-
Autumnal equinox
-
Eurasian red squirrel in Northumberland, England
-
Drop in on International Surfing Day
-
Fiordland National Park, New Zealand
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

