What is an aye-aye? Where do they live and what is the point of their strange middle finger? Learn all about them in our expert guide

By BBC Wildlife Magazine

Published: Monday, 30 October 2023 at 11:30 AM


Meet the aye-aye, a strange nocturnal creature that lives in Madagascar

What is an aye-aye?

An aye-aye is now accepted as a type of lemur, but it wasn’t always that way.

Since its discovery and description in 1788, the aye-aye Daubentonia madagascariensis has been the subject of considerable debate and confusion. The animal was first classified as a squirrel-like rodent on the basis of its appearance.

It was only some 100 years later that the aye-aye was finally accepted as a primate and lemur.

Indeed genetic analysis indicates that the aye-aye, along with all of the other lemurs, evolved from the same colonising ancestor primate, which rafted onto Madagascar about 55–60 million years ago.

There is no question that the aye-aye is the most unusual and distinct offshoot of the lemur evolutionary tree, and it is placed on its own in the family Daubentoniidae. A second species, now extinct, once occurred in the dry regions of south-west Madagascar: the giant aye-aye D. robusta.

How big is an aye-aye?

Aye-ayes measure 74–90cm from nose to tail tip, with the tail making up more than half its length, and weighs roughly 2–2.5kg.

What do aye-ayes look like?

The aye-aye combines a peculiar amalgamation of morphological features and behavioural traits that set it apart. As with rodents, the front teeth (incisors) grow continuously throughout its life. Its ears are massive, mobile and leathery, resembling those of a large bat.

Its extraordinary hands have clawed fingers and a skeletal middle digit, and its mammary glands are low on the torso, between the hind legs. Add widely spaced, piercing orange eyes, a coarse, shaggy black coat and a long, bushy tail, and the overall effect is something resembling an electrocuted witch’s cat with gremlin-like features.

Where do aye-ayes live?

Aye-ayes are only found in Madagascar. They are strictly nocturnal, mainly black, prefer to spend a lot of time high in the canopy, occur at low densities and occupy very large home ranges.

So it is not surprising that there have been few successful wild studies. Eleanor Sterling from the American Museum of Natural History carried out some of the first ground-breaking investigations in the 1980s, and her studies still underpin much of our knowledge of the species in the wild. 

“I spent two years on Nosy Mangabe, following aye-ayes throughout the night,” she says. “During the day they sleep high in the canopy in nests made from interwoven twigs and fresh and dead leaves. Nests may be occupied for several days, but there is high turnover and different individuals often use the same nest on different occasions.”

What do aye-ayes eat?