Lifecycle Members of this genus tend to live around 25 to 30 years, reaching sexual maturity at three to five years of age. Three-toed sloths do not have a mating season but breed year-round. Male three-toed sloths are attracted to females in
estrus by their screams echoing throughout the canopy. Sloth copulation lasts an average of 25 minutes. Male three-toed sloths are strongly polygamous and exclude competitors from their territory. Males are also able to compete with one another within small habitable territories. Females give birth to a single young after a
gestation period of around six months. The offspring cling to their mother's bellies for around nine months. They are
weaned around nine months of age when the mother leaves her home territory to her offspring and moves elsewhere. Adults are solitary, and mark their territories using anal
scent glands and
dung middens. For the first few months after giving birth, mothers remain at just one or two trees and guide their young. At about five to seven months of age, when the young have become more independent, mothers expand their resources and leave their young in new areas. During natal dispersion, three-toed sloths prefer tropical forests, often using riparian forest habitat to disperse while avoiding pastures and shade-grown cacao. The
home range for mothers is larger than those of young. After separation, only the mothers use the cacao-growing forest, but both use riparian forests. Different types of trees are used by both mother and young, which indicates that this agricultural matrix provides an important habitat type for these animals.
Dentition and skeleton Three-toed sloths have no
incisor or
canine teeth, just a set of peg-shaped cheek teeth that are not clearly divided into
premolars and
molars, and lack
homology with those teeth in other mammals, and thus are referred to as molariforms. The molariform dentition in three-toed sloths is simple and can be characterized as
dental formula of: . Three-toed sloths are unusual amongst
mammals in possessing as many as nine
cervical vertebrae, which may be due to mutations in the
homeotic genes. All other mammals have seven cervical vertebrae, other than the two-toed sloth and the
manatee, which have only six. == Internal and external ecology ==