“…Slow lorises are known to occur in northeast India and parts of southeast Asia, while slender lorises are restricted to southern India and Sri Lanka (Roonwal & Mohnot 1977, Nekaris & Bearder 2007. Slender lorises are small, often solitary and nocturnal and, consequently, poorly studied until the late 1990s, when research became more common; see, for example, studies of their distribution (Singh et al 1999, 2000, Kumar et al 2002), behavior (Nekaris 2001, Radhakrishna & Singh 2002a,b,c, 2004a and ecology (Nekaris & Rusmussen 2003, Kumara 2005. The slender lorises of India (Loris lydekkerianus lydekkerianus and L. l. malabaricus) are accorded the status of near threatened in the IUCN Red List of threatened species, and at the national level they have been assigned the highest level of protection under Schedule I, Part I of the Indian Wildlife Protection Act, 1972.…”