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  1. Mexican raccoons are highly intelligent animals about the size of a very big house cat. They have mask-like coloration on the face, and rings around their tails, and are members of the family procyonidae, along with raccoons, kinkajous and ring-tailed cats.

  2. The Coati is a raccoon-like omnivore, but is more slender and possesses a longer snout. It is a nosy, busy little creature with an insatiable appetite. The Coati is gregarious and noisy as it travel about in groups of from 6 to 24, holding its tail almost erect and chattering with others.

  3. 17 wrz 2019 · Here’s what I’ve learned about these amazing animals so far. Coatis are members of the raccoon family. They can rotate their nose 60 degrees and paws 180 degrees, so they can come down the tree head first. Watch this video of a coati climbing a palm tree in Iguazu Falls.

  4. 10 lip 2014 · The Kudamundi (also known as the Mexican raccoon) lives all across North and South America, in regions like Central America and Brazil, and they’re also an important part of wildlife in Mexico.

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  6. The white-nosed coati (Nasua narica), [2] also known as the coatimundi (/ koʊˌɑːtɪˈmʌndi /), [1][3] is a species of coati and a member of the family Procyonidae (raccoons and their relatives). Local Spanish names for the species include antoon, gato solo, pizote, and tejón, depending upon the region. [4]

  7. The Coati ranges from Arizona and parts of southern New Mexico in the United States through Mexico (except the Baja peninsula and central Sierra Madres) and Central America to Panama and marginally into South America in areas west of the Andes), especially in Colombia.