Ferry Quail

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Ferry Quail
(Volucrus frugivorus)
Species is extant.
Information
CreatorDisgustedorite Other
Week/Generation27/166
HabitatDarwin Bush, Dorite Rocky, Dorite Chaparral, Dorite Subtropical Woodland, Darwin Highboreal, North Darwin Rocky, North Darwin Highvelt, Darwin Veldt, North Darwin Plains, Central Darwin Rocky, South Darwin Highvelt, South Darwin Rocky, South Darwin Plains, South Darwin Chaparral, South Darwin Subtropical Woodland, Darwin Temperate Woodland, Central Wallace Veldt, Wallace Plains, Wallace Volcanic, Wallace Bush, Wallace Chaparral, Verserus Rocky, Central Wallace Highboreal, Verserus Highvelt, West Wallace Veldt, Raptor Plains, Raptor Veldt, Raptor Chaparral, Raptor Highvelt, Raptor Volcanic, Raptor Highboreal, Iituem Plains Archipelago, Martyk Temperate Woodland Archipelago, Kosemen Temperate Woodland, Vivus Highboreal, Vivus Rocky; Sagan 4 Troposphere while crossing stretches of water
Size30 cm long
Primary MobilityBiped, Erect Legs, Powered Flight, Wing Launch
SupportEndoskeleton (Chitin)
DietOmnivore (Ferry berries, Feroak berries, Cragmyr berries, Robust Arid Ferine berries, Bristlepile berries, Fuzzpile berries, Scrubland Quhft berries, Sandy Orbibom berries, Cliff Bristler berries, Quilbil berries, Twin-Tail Orbibom berries, Woodyshroom achenes, Shaggy Volleypom megaspores, Bangsticks seeds, Yuccagave seeds, Snow Windbulb seeds, Quone nuts, Coniflor capsules, Vermees, Floraverms, Teacup Sauceback larvae, Minikruggs, Silkruggs, Whiskrugg, Cleaner Borvermid, False Cleaner Borvermid, Communal Janit, Grub Krugg, Nightcrawler Borvermid, Corkscrew Krugg)
RespirationActive (Microlungs)
ThermoregulationEndotherm (Feathers)
ReproductionSexual (Male and Female, Hard-Shelled Eggs in Nests)
Taxonomy
Domain
Kingdom
Subkingdom
Phylum
Clade
Subphylum
Superclass
Class
Subclass
Superorder
Order
Family
Genus
Species
Eukaryota
Binucleozoa
Symbiovermes (info)
Thoracocephalia
Coluripoda
Vermitheria (info)
Cephalischia (info)
Ornitheria (info)
Sceloptera
Volucriformes
Volucra
Volucridae
Volucrus
Volucrus frugivorus
Ancestor:Descendants:

The ferry quail split from its ancestor. It has taken to an arboreal lifestyle making use of its splayed tail spurs and elongated, clawed toes to grasp the branches of trees. Unlike its ancestor which lives deep in the old growth dark forests, the ferry quail lives in the younger growth forests, open shrublands, and plains where sun-loving purple trees such as ferries can be found. It also feeds on ferry berries, as long as they are in season where it resides, and contributes greatly to their distribution. In fact, it is thanks to the ferry quail that ferries exist on the Kosemen landmass, as it will fly over short stretches of ocean to nearby islands when there's too much competition and carries ferry seeds with it in its gut. It will also consume other kinds of berries, but ferry berries are its favorite, as it nests in their branches. Outside of the fruiting season, it mostly eats worms and seeds.

The ferry quail is a better flier and is streamlined compared to its ancestor. It has rubbery skin surrounding its spiracles where its ceres once lay, and its external sauce plate appears as only a scute on its back. There are no feathers directly on the top of its back, but its broad contour feathers cover it up. It can cool down on a hot day by spreading the feathers to expose its back. It has lost its central tail spike and its tail fan is flatter. It has also, in a more figurative sense, streamlined its vision; its many eyestrils, each corresponding to an oral spine as a consequence of their origins as gums, are now gathered into compound eyestrils. This occurred as a result of the scent line tightening into a zigzag on the side of the head. This is imperfect, as 2-6 additional clusters of eyestrils with little functional use form on top of its head.

The ferry quail has a call which sounds similar to a door creaking, with which it communicates with other ferry quails, establishes territory, or attracts a mate. It is no longer capable of echolocating, as preferring more sunlit environments has eliminated the need for such an ability, but it is still capable of producing high-pitched clicks and chirps with its tongue. The skin around its eyestrils is colorful in the ultraviolet spectrum and its underbelly is conspicuous, traits which aid in species identification, social interaction, and sexual selection.

Chick.

The ferry quail no longer nests on the ground. Instead, it constructs a nest in a ferry tree or some similar tree or shrub, hidden among the branches. Like its ancestor, it uses twigs, feathers, hair, trichomes, and plent cotton to construct the nest. It mates in the spring. It lays 3-5 eggs per clutch which take roughly 2 weeks to hatch, with both parents taking turns incubating the eggs. Unlike its ancestor, the ferry quail's offspring are blind, naked, and helpless, vaguely resembling passerine nestlings. This is because the safety of the trees made well-developed young no longer advantageous, so it was selected against. The nestlings are mostly fed small binucleid worms by both parents, and they reach the fledgling stage after just 2 more weeks. They take another 2 weeks to build up enough strength to be independent. They begin breeding the following spring. As small creatures susceptible to predation, very few survive their first year and they have a life expectancy of only 2, but an especially lucky individual can live for as long as 20.