Fish •
Seahorses. Seahorses have fully prehensile tails, which they use to attach themselves to objects such as seagrass, algae, sponges, corals, or even man-made objects.
Mammals (
Tamandua mexicana) making use of its prehensile tail •
Binturong. One of the few
Old World animals with fully prehensile tails, although they use only the tip of the tail. •
Harvest mouse. Another Old World mammal, the
harvest mouse (
Micromys minutus) also has a fully prehensile tail. It is commonly found amongst areas of tall grasses such as cereal crops (particularly wheat and oats), roadside verges, hedgerows, reedbeds, dykes and salt-marshes. •
Tree pangolin. One of the few Old World mammals with a fully prehensile tail. •
Platypus. The semi-aquatic
monotreme found in
Australia. Much the same as Opossums, Platypuses gather leaves to line their nests, using their tails to carry the materials they've collected. •
New World monkeys. Many New World monkeys in the family
Atelidae, which includes
howler monkeys,
spider monkeys and
woolly monkeys, have grasping tails often with a bare
tactile pad. This is in contrast with their distant
Old World monkey cousins who do not have prehensile tails. •
Anteaters. Anteaters are found in Central and South America. Nine of the ten species of anteater, the seven species of silky anteater and the two species of tamandua, have prehensile tails. •
Kinkajou. The kinkajou of South and Central America is the only other animal of the order
Carnivora, besides the binturong, to sport the adaptation. ==Animals with partially prehensile tails==