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JOrnitho



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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 25.03.22 17:24. Заголовок: Galliformes and other animals for South America


Hello! I'm back with ideas for some new species for South America. I found in my computer an archive with some ideas for fauna and flora that I had some time ago and decided to show there to ask your opinion about them. The first is about a descendant of the domestic chicken.

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I also have in this archive some names for possible species that I never developed bayond some few facts. Maybe someone could help me make their descriptions.

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JOrnitho



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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 13.07.22 21:52. Заголовок: Биолог пишет: An al..


Биолог пишет:

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An albatross will have a wingspan of 3 m at a body length of about 1,5 m at most. So your stork should either be shorter in height or have larger wings to support its body. If it's not flightless, of course


Ops, my bad! Does 180 cm and 230 cm of wingspan seems plausible?

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 14.07.22 11:26. Заголовок: JOrnitho 180 cm and..


JOrnitho

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180 cm and 230 cm of wingspan seems plausible


Yes, quite so.

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 20.07.22 04:00. Заголовок: Is possible for a de..


Is possible for a descendant of the cougar to live in the Andes and Andean Plateau with a niche similar to that of the snow leopard? Or the project already have something like that?

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 20.07.22 09:22. Заголовок: JOrnitho I believe ..


JOrnitho
I believe I've mentioned all of the Andean mammals from Bestiary, so there is a free niche for the cougar, if it is not extinct in neocene. Extinction is possible, as with tigers and lions and leopards, and other large felines.

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 20.07.22 15:21. Заголовок: Биолог пишет: I bel..


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I believe I've mentioned all of the Andean mammals from Bestiary, so there is a free niche for the cougar, if it is not extinct in neocene.


I was reading the Bestiary and found the Andean raptor cat, a descendant of the cougar living in the mountains. I think that it could be the feline predator of the chapter. Also, maybe the mountain tapirotherium could appear too.

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 20.07.22 17:01. Заголовок: JOrnitho Oops. I mi..


JOrnitho
Oops. I missed the cat! Maybe because it is an additional species to a main one within a new genus.
But the tapirotherium already is placed in a chapter (namely, 52 "Shadow of Wings on the Grass"), so it is unlikely to be included by the Author in another one. But can be mentioned in the chapter's text.

P.S. I've added the Andean raptor cat to the chapter's bestiary.

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 21.07.22 00:42. Заголовок: Биолог пишет: But c..


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But can be mentioned in the chapter's text.


Yes, I was thinking that could be this way.
Also, I had some ideas for birds of the Andean Plateau: a descendant of the burrowing owl, a species of passerine and a hummingbird.
Another animal that could appear is the Andean rapacious parrot, a species that I posted in the Psittacids topic.

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 21.07.22 12:00. Заголовок: JOrnitho Good ideas..


JOrnitho
Good ideas! I will add the Andean rapacious parrot to the bestiary.

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 21.07.22 18:56. Заголовок: Биолог пишет: Good ..


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Good ideas! I will add the Andean rapacious parrot to the bestiary.


Thanks! I'll start to work on their description.
Also, can I make a species of raptor cat that inhabits the Atlantic forests of South America, rather than the open areas? It could appear in the chapter.

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 21.07.22 20:29. Заголовок: JOrnitho Yes, you c..


JOrnitho
Yes, you can, there are more felines in South American forests that do not yet have descendants in neocene.

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 21.07.22 23:53. Заголовок: Биолог пишет: Yes, ..


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Yes, you can, there are more felines in South American forests that do not yet have descendants in neocene.


Then there could be a descendant of the jaguarundi. If the jaguarete also live on this area, these two felines could have the same relationship that the jaguar and puma had in South America, with the two avoiding each other by focusing in different food niches. This descendant of the jaguarundi could feed in smaller and agile prey.

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 22.07.22 11:53. Заголовок: JOrnitho Yes, why n..


JOrnitho
Yes, why not. Also, the Leopardus genus (ocelot, oncilla etc.) can have descendants.

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 22.07.22 14:27. Заголовок: Биолог пишет: Yes, ..


Биолог пишет:

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Yes, why not.


Then, I'll also make this description. It could appear in Atlantic forest chapter, as one of the dangers that the Tamoio cat needs to avoid.

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 22.07.22 17:38. Заголовок: JOrnitho OK...


JOrnitho
OK.

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 24.07.22 17:48. Заголовок: I finished the descr..


I finished the description of the descendant of the jaguarundi for the chapter about the Atlantic forest.
Also I was thinking that there could be some herbivore in the chapter to be its prey. What could be more plausible, a descendant of the domestic sheep, or a relative of the giant paca (Megapaca)?

Eyra (Eyrailurus pantheroides)
The human actions during the Holocene caused the decline of many species. However some species survived and in the Neocene they gave rise to new species. The jaguarundi (Herpailurus yagouaroundi) proved to be resilient enough to survive the anthropogenic onslaught. In North America it gave origin to the balam and in South America they gave origin to the eyra. The name eyra was used by indigenous people of Brazil to name the jaguarundi, but was also associated with the tayra (Eira barbara). The eyra inhabits the Atlantic forests of South America, both lowland and highland. They also inhabit the areas of Araucaria forests. Part of their range is shared with the jaguarete, but they avoid competition by taking different prey.
From nose to tail tip, the male eyra is 150 cm. The female is smaller, with 130 cm of length. If compared to the jaguarete, the eyra is less muscular and not as powerfully built. The coat is uniformly colored with at most a few faint markings on the face and the belly, though kittens are spotted for a short duration. Their fur is mostly dark gray with a grizzled look due to bright and dark rings on individual hairs.
The eyra is a generalist, hypercarnivore. They prefer small to medium sized prey, avoiding the large prey that are prefered by the jaguarete. When these two species interact, the eyra will flee, even abandoning their prey. They will hunt reptiles, small rodents, fishes, monkeys, birds and deermaras. Although capable of sprinting, the eyra is typically an ambush predator. It stalks through brush and trees, across ledges, or other covered spots, before delivering a powerful leap onto the back of its prey and a suffocating neck bite. They are capable of breaking the neck of some of its smaller prey with a strong bite and momentum bearing the animal to the ground.
Like almost all felines, the eyra is a mostly solitary animal. Only mothers and kittens stay together, with adults meeting rarely. While generally loners, they will reciprocally share kills with one another and organize themselves into small communities defined by the territories of dominant males. The animals within these areas socialize more frequently with each other than with outsiders. Male home ranges include or overlap with those of females but not with those of other males. Home ranges of females overlap slightly. Males create scrapes composed of leaves and duff with their hind feet, and mark them with urine and sometimes feces.
The eyra can reproduce during the entire year. Females reach sexual maturity at the age of 18 months to three years and are in estrus for about eight days of a 23-day cycle and the gestation period is approximately 91 days. Both adult males and females may mate with multiple partners and a female's litter can have multiple paternities. Only females are involved in parenting. Litter size is between one and six cubs, with two being more common. Caves and other alcoves that offer protection are used as litter dens. Born blind, cubs are completely dependent on their mother at first, and begin to be weaned at around three months of age. As they grow, they begin to go out on forays with their mother, first visiting kill sites, and after six months beginning to hunt small prey on their own. Kitten survival rates are just over one per litter. Juveniles remain with their mothers for one to two years. When the females reaches estrous again, their offspring must disperse or the male will kill them. Males tend to disperse further than females. They have a lifespan of 16 years.

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 24.07.22 18:38. Заголовок: JOrnitho Good eyra!..


JOrnitho
Good eyra!
About its prey, there are large rodents there, it will not starve

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 25.07.22 14:03. Заголовок: Биолог пишет: About..


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About its prey, there are large rodents there, it will not starve


I mean, for him to hunt in the chapter.
I was thinking that the barbets that I mentioned for the War for the Hollows could have strong beaks and legs to dig the soil of cliffs to make their nest. They would partially fill the niche of toucans. What do you think?

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 25.07.22 18:21. Заголовок: JOrnitho I mean, fo..


JOrnitho

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I mean, for him to hunt in the chapter.


Actually I was joking These include striped tree porcupine, myriyutherium, jakarawa and barocavia. Of these, the striped tree porcupine is in Bestiary, the other three are already in chapters.

 цитата:
I was thinking that the barbets that I mentioned for the War for the Hollows could have strong beaks and legs to dig the soil of cliffs to make their nest. They would partially fill the niche of toucans. What do you think?


I think they can. Also, they are very beautiful birds. Toucan-type birds living in cliff burrows? Sounds interesting!

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 25.07.22 18:51. Заголовок: Биолог пишет: I thi..


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I think they can. Also, they are very beautiful birds. Toucan-type birds living in cliff burrows? Sounds interesting!


They are very beautiful! These descendants of the barbets could have colorful feathers with dull beaks, differently of ttue toucans.
Also, I was thinking that the chapter "War of the Hollows" could introduce a subfamily trochilids that is heavily specialized to steal nectar. They would have beaks capable of doing small cirurgical holes in flowers and then introduce their long and thin tongue to extract it. What do you think? They can also have other adaptations for that criminal lifestyle.

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ссылка на сообщение  Отправлено: 26.07.22 10:52. Заголовок: JOrnitho Also, I wa..


JOrnitho

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Also, I was thinking that the chapter "War of the Hollows" could introduce a subfamily trochilids that is heavily specialized to steal nectar. They would have beaks capable of doing small cirurgical holes in flowers and then introduce their long and thin tongue to extract it.


The hummingbirds (Trochilidae) have very weak beaks, too weak to drill through petals. Also, why would they need to drill? This would be OK for some type of entirely closed flowers that cannot be cross-pollinated in a way other than some animal drilling or gnawing through its petals (or self-pollinated). And this looks unlikely.

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