
Also known as Bassaricyon gabbii, olingo, northern olingo
species of mammal
Maximum longevity: 21.8 years (captivity) Observations: One captive specimen was still alive at 21.8 years of age (Richard Weigl 2005).
via IUCN
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The northern olingo (Bassaricyon gabbii), also known as the bushy-tailed olingo or, simply, the olingo (due to it being the most common of the species), is an arboreal (tree-dwelling) member of the raccoon family, Procyonidae, which also includes the coatimundis and kinkajou. Native to Central America, it was the first species of olingo to be scientifically described; while it is considered by some authors to be the only "true" olingo species, a review of the genus Bassaricyon had shown there to be a total of four species, two of those now being considered synonymous with the northern olingo. Its specific name honors William More Gabb (1839-1878), who found and collected the first specimen for western science.
Description
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).