Burrowing, digging, hanging . . . many impressively large claws have harmless uses. For example, “anteaters have long claws which they use for tearing open ant nests and termite nests,” says Rob Voss, a curator at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City.
Sloths take nonviolent claws to the extreme. Their claws may look like daggers on their paws, but sloths mainly use them to sleep! “They spend so little time on the ground,” says Kollias. “Their claws are long and curved so they can hang from branches for days.”
The giant armadillo has the longest claws of all. On average, its biggest claw measures 20 centimeters long — nearly one-fifth of its body length. Similar to the sloth or anteater, its insect-eating relatives, the armadillo has claws that help it dig for food.