Sanguine Padfoot: Difference between revisions

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Splitting not only from its ancestor but also its way of life, the '''sanguine padfoot''' no longer lives its entire life underground. Spending most of its time wandering the underbrush, they now only go beneath the soil in order to live in shallow dens. Because of this, they now tend to eat the leaves and fruits of flora instead of the roots, though that wont stop the occasional individual from digging one up with the claws on its front limbs. With their weight distributed evenly across their three-toed feet, they are capable of walking across rocky terrain with little difficulty.
Splitting not only from its ancestor but also its way of life, the '''sanguine padfoot''' no longer lives its entire life underground. Spending most of its time wandering the underbrush, they now only go beneath the soil in order to live in shallow dens. Because of this, they now tend to eat the leaves and fruits of flora instead of the roots, though that wont stop the occasional individual from digging one up with the claws on its front limbs. With their weight distributed evenly across their three-toed feet, they are capable of walking across rocky terrain with little difficulty.

More solitary in nature, they often form mated pairs that will only stick together for a single season, take care of the resulting young, then split. Young individuals need to mature quickly, typically within a year or two, while they are still being watched over. When they are finally kicked out of the den, they are forced to find or dig out new ones of their own, establish new territories, and then defend them with an aggressiveness unbecoming for their relatively small size. Few predators, even when encountering a sanguine padfoot half their size, will dare to take them on head on.
More solitary in nature, they often form mated pairs that will only stick together for a single season, take care of the resulting young, then split. Young individuals need to mature quickly, typically within a year or two, while they are still being watched over. When they are finally kicked out of the den, they are forced to find or dig out new ones of their own, establish new territories, and then defend them with an aggressiveness unbecoming for their relatively small size. Few predators, even when encountering a sanguine padfoot half their size, will dare to take them on head on.

[[category:herbivore]]
[[category:herbivore]]
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Revision as of 07:40, 21 September 2021

Sanguine Padfoot
(Erythrorhachis nobadgerus)
Main image of Sanguine Padfoot
Species is extant.
Information
CreatorNergali Other
Week/Generation24/153
HabitatMartyk Plains
Size70 cm Long
Primary MobilityUnknown
SupportUnknown
DietHerbivore (Pioneeroots, Sunstalks, Mainland Chime Slingberry), Weak Photosynthesis
RespirationUnknown
ThermoregulationUnknown
ReproductionSexual, Two Genders, Live Birth
Taxonomy
Domain
Genus
Species
Eukaryota
Erythrorhachis
Erythrorhachis nobadgerus
Ancestor:Descendants:

Splitting not only from its ancestor but also its way of life, the sanguine padfoot no longer lives its entire life underground. Spending most of its time wandering the underbrush, they now only go beneath the soil in order to live in shallow dens. Because of this, they now tend to eat the leaves and fruits of flora instead of the roots, though that wont stop the occasional individual from digging one up with the claws on its front limbs. With their weight distributed evenly across their three-toed feet, they are capable of walking across rocky terrain with little difficulty. More solitary in nature, they often form mated pairs that will only stick together for a single season, take care of the resulting young, then split. Young individuals need to mature quickly, typically within a year or two, while they are still being watched over. When they are finally kicked out of the den, they are forced to find or dig out new ones of their own, establish new territories, and then defend them with an aggressiveness unbecoming for their relatively small size. Few predators, even when encountering a sanguine padfoot half their size, will dare to take them on head on.