Citations:Brazilian aardvark


 * 2011 June 9, Flora Drury, "So that's what an aardvark looks like", in the Worcester News
 * [photo caption] Georgina Simms Soteras, aged three, makes friends with Animal Mania’s latest addition – a six-week-old Brazilian aardvark.
 * Animal Mania bought along their newest addition – the six-week-old Brazilian aardvark – when the group visited the Orchard Cafe at Worcester Woods Country Park.


 * 2012 November 14, John R. Platt, "Brazil Plans to Clone Its Endangered Species", Scientific American; quoted in print in 2020, Tom Phillips, Truth: A Brief History of Total Bullsh*t, Harlequin (ISBN 9781488076770)
 * If they receive government approval, the species they'll be working with would include the maned wolf (Chrysocyon brachyurus); jaguar (Panthera onca); black lion tamarin (Leontopithecus chrysopygus); bush dog (Speothos venaticus); Brazilian aardvark, also known locally as coati (Nasua nasua); collared anteater (Tamandua tetradactyla); gray brocket deer (Mazama gouazoubira); and bison (Bison bison).
 * 2013 February 20, "Brazilian aardvark on the loose in Marlow" (headline, when a coati escaped; article by James Nadal), in Bucks Free Press (Buckinghamshire, UK); quoted in print in Phillips (2020, work cited above)

the coati: as a crossword clue

 * 2010 June, Weird (magazine), volume 9, issue 77, page 21, crossword clue:
 * 90. Brazilian aardvark
 * 2011 November 7, the McGill Daily, page 22, crossword clue:
 * 18. Brazilian aardvark
 * 2014 January 31, The Current (student paper of Eckerd College), page 11, crossword clue:
 * 43. Brazilian aardvark

the coati: mentiony citations

 * 2010 June 21, Jonathan Brown, From wallabies to chipmunks, the exotic creatures thriving in the UK, in The Independent, page 8, photo caption:
 * Coati (also known as the Brazilian aardvark): Cumbria
 * 2011 November 17, Kelley Scarsbrook, Pura vida makes Costa Rica a happy place, in The Now, page 64:
 * A coati, also known as the Brazilian aardvark, looks for attention in Costa Rica
 * 2013, Danny Martineau Jr., The Waterfront, Xlibris Corporation (ISBN 9781493147649), page 36:
 * It was a petting zoo which housed my favorite animal, the coatimundi. I have always taken a liking to long-snouted animals, from anteaters and aardvarks to Afghan hounds. Ironically, coatimundi are also known as Brazilian aardvarks!
 * 2013, Caspar Henderson, The Book of Barely Imagined Beings: A 21st Century Bestiary, University of Chicago Press (ISBN 9780226044842), page 10:
 * The coati, also known as the hog-nosed coon, the snookum bear or the Brazilian aardvark, is a kind of raccoon.
 * 2014, N. Safier, Beyond Brazilian Nature, in Michiel van Groesen, The Legacy of Dutch Brazil, Cambridge University Press (ISBN 9781107061170), page 179:
 * In the case of the Coati, for instance, also known as the Brazilian aardvark, Buffon explained that "Marcgrave, and practically all of the Naturalists after him, said that the aardvark had six toes in its hind feet: M. Brisson is the only one who has not copied this error of Marcgrave [...]"
 * 2017, PHD Cançado, JLH Faccini, GM Mourão et al., Current status of ticks and tick-host relationship in domestic and wild animals from Pantanal wetlands in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil:
 * [...] Captured carnivores included the brown-nosed coati (also known as the Brazilian aardvark, Nasua nasua Linnaeus, 1766), the crab-eating fox (Cerdocyon thous Linnaeus, 1766), the ocelot (or dwarf leopard, Leopardus pardalis Linnaeus, 1758) and the crab-eating raccoon [...]
 * 2020, Brian Griffith, War and Peace with the Beasts, Wood Lake Publishing Inc. (ISBN 9781773431802)
 * The coati is a kind of Latin American raccoon, otherwise known as the Brazilian aardvark, the Mexican tejón, the snookum bear, or the hog-nosed coon. Beebe aimed to study the coati with scientific objectivity, but the beast wanted to play.
 * The coati is a kind of Latin American raccoon, otherwise known as the Brazilian aardvark, the Mexican tejón, the snookum bear, or the hog-nosed coon. Beebe aimed to study the coati with scientific objectivity, but the beast wanted to play.