Warf Gossalizard

The warf gossalizard split from its ancestor. They are much more compact and heavy, they are slightly warm blooded, also their fur is now dark grey. The most significant change is that they produce warfarin and use it their silk and saliva. When hunting in the winter they dig a shallow pit and sit in it, looking like a snowy rock they wait for something to move in front of them, sometimes for days, when that does happen they charge while spraying silk and biting. In the summer they shed into brown and just charge from their burrows. Once they land a bite and get silk on the wound they stop and follow the target until it bleeds to death, then they engorge and drag whats left into their burrow. After a meal they roll on their backs and sun. They mate on sight and have delayed implantation for up to a year. Young hatch as soon as day highs go over 0 degrees.