Bokabee

The bokabee has replaced its ancestor and is now more efficient in the Ovi Lake and Ovi River. It still eats aquatic plants, but its trunks and mouth have combined to become one very flexible sucker. This sucks plants into the mouth where layers of teeth grind them down. The soft pads on their feet have grown bigger, giving a larger surface area for faster locomotion. The back legs have grown smaller to give the bokabee a much more streamlined shape. It still breaths through its tail. Its ears and large eyes are on the top of its head for vision and hearing outside the water.