Night Glider

The night glider split from it's ancestor, the blood shrew. The flap of skin between it's ancestor's legs expanded and became a membrane for gliding. It is nocturnal, and the eyes grew bigger as big eyes are good at night. When it finds a sleeping plent, it lands on it, and then scrapes the skin using modified canine teeth. Then the tongue laps up the green "blood". Since it's digestive system completely adapted for the consumption of blood, it stopped eating worms and smaller plents. When sleeping, they attach themselves onto any tall plant they can find, preferably pagodapalms. Their tails developed a stabilizing "fin".

When the babies are mature enough the leave the pouch, the babies instinctively knows how to glide, and they leave their mothers.