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Captain Howdy
L'Enfant Terrible

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#7
Old 04-08-2013, 09:13 PM




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hummy:
Quote:
Originally Posted by hummy View Post
This is Day Two
This creature is a(n):Quackalope
This is its story:The unique animal hails from down under and is quite populous. he has been know to steal the family house pet right out of your back yard, with out so much as a g'day mate! when this animal is cornered, since they are not the swiftest of animals, they puff up their fluffy coat and stripped tail to become twice his size. this can attract the females of the species and they happily will amuse the fairer of the species for up to four hours! anything longer can be a problem and a vet should be consulted. seems size really does matter! their litters then to be born in multiples of twins and usually it is one female and one male. the male of the species will stay with the family and will not mate with another female his whole life.

twotickets:
Quote:
Originally Posted by twotickets View Post
This is Day Two
This creature is a(n): Geomana Capra; colloquially, "Horned Water-Gerbil" or "The rat that swims"

This is its story: This diminutive creature thrives on land and in lakes and ponds. Well-known for its high-pitched shrieks, the horned water-gerbil is shunned by human society and is often exterminated as a pest. The horned water-gerbil prefers to live in underground burrows or under tree roots as close to water as possible, as it is an easily frightened creature and cannot run very easily.

The horned water-gerbil primarily eats minnows, water lilies, and insects, but it sometimes supplements this diet with small fish, which the horned water-gerbil catches using its tail as bait, as the tail takes on a worm-like appearance underwater. The horned water-gerbil can hold its breath for up to sixty seconds.

In the spring, male horned water-gerbils fight for dominance and the right to mate using their short, straight horns. Given the awkward placement of these horns, the horned water-gerbils fight back-to-back, wildly swinging their heads in a way that has often been called "head-banging to rock." The horned water-gerbil loses its horns every year, and humans have taken to collecting these horns for use in aphrodisiacs and edgy modern art.



Mythos:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mythos View Post
This is Day Two
This creature is a(n): Platyped rocerdenti (Common name: Wetnosed chattering grump)
This is its story: Rare across the globe except for on the island of Duval where it is quite common, especially along inland streams, this flat-footed rodent is perhaps one of the most notorious challenges to hiking on the island due to it's highly aggressive behavior. They are herbivorous with a particular taste for rushes and woody nuts and have adopted a rather ingenious method to open these nuts by crushing them under flat stones.

They mate for life and have an elaborate courtship routine requiring the building of dams and creating a trail leading to said dam using colorful vegetation. Female grumps are meant to follow these to the dam and assess the male's building skills. If she approves then they mate but if she does not approve it is not uncommon for her to unceremoniously headbutt the structure to oblivion.

Wetnosed chattering grump communities are not limited by size, and often balloon after a short time into large colonies. These colonies are defended by a sizable percentage of their number against any larger animals that might be seen as a threat to their group. While they do not move quickly due to the configuration of their legs and feet, the sheer number of alerted grumps to an intruder is certainly cause for alarm. Should they become close enough to such a target, it is standard practice to give them a few head butts as a warning before teeth become involved.

These creatures have never been successfully domesticated and all attempts to do so have resulted in grump communities centralized over parkland not too far from the household that made such attempt. These communities have required specialized teams to relocate the grumps so that they no longer attack the local children.

Ling:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ling View Post
This is Day Two
This creature is a(n): Webbed feet Beaver
This is its story: The Webbed feet Beaver is a small rodent-like beaver with long ears which give it excellent hearing. It lives near water like most beavers but doesn't build dams, instead it digs a labyrinth of tunnels much like ants. All this digging of tunnels makes the ground weak and often heavier creatures would cause the tunnels to collapse.

Velvet:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Velvet View Post
This is Day Two
This creature is a(n): Draggonis Cygaslpes ( Drag-gon-is Ci-gas-lisp)

This is its story: The Draggonis Cygaslpes (Swadraver) is a charming creature that spends a great amount of time in the fresh water lakes and rivers of Duval. It is a very good swimmer, paddling with its large, scaly, swan-like feet. When they are on land they spend their days roaming the hills of grass by the river side, collecting their meals and taking it back to their family. It is the female's job to get the food, while the male lazes around and watches the kids. Their home is unique in the fact that they live in a burrow that starts under water. When an adult Swadraver is seeking to build a home, she (because females always build the home and a male will eventually move in) observes the river banks for a concealing coverage over the mud, like tree roots, moss, or tall grass. She the dives nearly to the bottom and begins the journey of carving the tunnels. Being a mammal, the Swadraver can only hold her breath for twenty minutes at a time, so it takes a few trips to get the tunnel started, but once it is started, it doesn't take hardly anytime at all.

Tunnel Making Process: She uses her sharp claws and teeth to start making a small hole into the side of the river wall. Once she is in far enough she finds four sticks that around about the same size and she places one on top and the bottom horizontally and two on the sides of the opening vertically to mark her dam and help support it from caving in at the opening. Deeper and deeper she digs her tunnel, slowly moving upwards and while her teeth and claws are digging their way through, her large back feet are widening the tunnel as she swims through. Finally, her tunnel breaks above the surface of the water, but still underground and completely hidden. She digs out a many different tunnels in her home system, some dry, some leading into other parts of the water in case escape is necessary. Once she carves out a dry spot that she feels comfortable enough with she begins building a nest made out of straw, clay, grass, leaves, and her own fur. The places this nest to the side of the dry part of the tunneled circle and in the middle she stacks on small stones and rocks in a circle, leaving the middle empty and dry. Of course all this takes time and she has to constantly go in and out of the opening in the water. Finally, using her own instinct and skill she is able to pinpoint the exact location of her tunnel while above ground and using a long stick, she begins to drive a small hole into the ground that opens right above where she built the small stone circle. Gathering more grass and twigs, she takes them to her tunnel and places them into the center of the stone circle where she will allow them to dry off and using a very neat feature, start a small fire.

Abilities: Digging, foraging, swimming, building homes and structures, butting heads with their horns, and fire breathing. Wait.. what? Yes, you heard right. This creature can cause a spark of fire to instantaneously come out of her mouth. Only females can fire breathe for some reason. It does have a purpose though.

The Young: Swadraver couples mate and then the female lays eggs. Though she is a mammal, she will lay eggs in the nest the made for them. She incubates the eggs by starting a small fire in the designated area which warms the entire tunnel. This is why they never migrate and never worry about random cold fronts which would kill the sensitive eggs. After incubating for 16 weeks, the small ones finally break through the shell using the tiny nubs of the horns that have started growing and search for their mommy so they can feed on the milk she has developed just for them. When they are of age to learn how to forage and swim, the mother puts them up to a true test. She guides them to the opening of the tunnel which is way underwater and it is simply up to instinct whether the offspring will be able to reach the end of the tunnel and then reach the surface of the water. Some make it, some don't. :(

Mating rivalry: Of course, all males around want a chance with this female. She has built a fine home, and is very plump and sexy to them. ;D So to compete, they butt horns and rattle and shake them back and forth until one finally backs off. The winner takes his female to the tunnel to start courtship with a headache, but a prize smile.


---------- Post added 04-17-2013 at 01:28 PM ----------

Sorry about the long stories.. xD I get over excited when using my imagination..
Antagonist:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Antagonist View Post
This is Day Two
This creature is a(n): Burrowcoon
This is its story: The Burrowcoon is one of the native creatures to Duval. These furry little creatures with horns may look deceptively cute and cuddly to the average person, but they are very aggressive and protective of their territories, and will fiercely defend them to the point of killing themselves in the process.

The Burrowcoons are small, beaver-sized mammals from the rodent family, and live about the grassy plains in the area. While it may seem strange that a creature with such large webbed feet prefer to live on the land instead of near the waters, those feet are actually for scooping and shoveling large amounts of dirt out of their underground tunnels that they spend most of their lives digging. Their horns are excellent in levering stubborn rocks out of their way while burrowing, and their teeth are sharp for gnawing through roots. One can spot a Burrowcoon nest from the mounds of dirt piled about, and oftentimes, from the areas with dead plantations due to their diet. The Burrowcoon's diets consists mainly of new-grown roots and bulbs, and their voracious appetites often kill the plants near their nests, which sometimes become a hazardous problem for farms when large portions of their crops begin dying. The holes made by their burrowing and nests also cause horses or cattle to trip and break their legs in when they mis-step, so they are generally unwelcome to farmers and ranchers.

A typical Burrowcoon nest contains up to ten rooms, with four or five for food storage, two or three for resting, one for bodily waste (that is regularly cleaned), and the remaining as extra rooms for storage. The tunnels also have many exits to avoid and escape from predators, so they are very difficult to capture.

When their territory is challenged, a Burrowcoon would make high-pitched screeching sounds, and bare their teeth at the intruder. If the intruder does not leave, they will often charge at them with their horns lowered, and continue attacking with horns, claws, and teeth until the intruder leaves. The only exception to this is when a predator is around, in which case they will remain underground until the danger is gone. During their mating season in spring, an area populated by Burrowcoons could often see these creatures headbutting and filling the air with their shrieks as they challenge one another for the right to mate. Both female and male Burrowcoons will fight one another until a pair finds themselves satisfied with their mate.

Typical Burrowcoons can have up to six pups at a time, and both parents would take turns in feeding and raising them until the younglings have matured. The pups will not grow their horns until seven months after they are born, which signals their maturity. The parents will then cease their care for them and even attack then until they leave to find and mark their own territory.

The Burrowcoons are sometimes hunted by humans for their soft furry pelts, and their horns make for excellent spearheads and daggers. The meat is also very tender, which can be made into a variety of dishes. However, they can only be hunted during the stated hunting season, and any Burrowcoons hunted outside of the season will cost the hunter(s) to be fined a hefty sum of $10,000 - $25,000 gold per Burrowcoon.

LaVida:
Quote:
Originally Posted by LaVida View Post
This is Day Two
This creature is a(n): Duckfire Bunnicula
This is its story: The Duckfire Bunnicula belongs to the mammal family. It was once a multitude of animals until a monumental lighting occurrence where a rabbit, a ferret, a duck, and a bat where zapped and fused together into one body that is now known as the duckfire bunnicula. This creature is nocturnal and feeds on blood like the bat. It is also very fast in water due to its duck like feet and can be seen zooming across the water up to 50 miles an hour. From the rabbit and ferret halves, the bunnicula has excellent hearing, night vision, and balance. Next time you think you have been bitten by a mosquito, think again....
Q U E E N:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Q U E E N View Post
This is Day Two
This creature is a(n): Jackypus!
This is its story: A mixture of a jackrabbit and a platypus, the Jackypus is the result of mating a Jackrabbit with a Platypus. It mostly resembles the jackrabbit, for its bunny-like body, prongs (or horns), and arms. Its platypus side comes from the webbed feet that help it swim easily through water, and it is born in a leathery egg, much like the platypus. The Jackypus is famous for looking very docile one minute, picking its way through worms and nuts to eat, then ferocious the next. During mating season, the Jackypus gets particularly rowdy with other males to fight for dominance. Like the platypus, they have a "fang"-like protrusion from the inside of their hind leg that injects 20 different toxins and poisons into the system of the unlucky loser of the fight for dominance. A human or any other animal would die immediately from the poison, but a Jackypus would simple filter the poisons into their own system if injected. A Jackypus can be found all over the globe, from marshy swamps to the dry deserts.

iamnotspam:
Quote:
Originally Posted by iamnotspam View Post
This is Day Two
This creature is a(n): "Plamatus Jackus Rabbitus", or "Duck-footed Jack-Rabbit"
This is its story:

This creature was not created through a natural process but through genetic mutation in a distant and little-known place called 'Area 51'.

While so many people in that country (and outside of it) thought Area 51 had to do with extremities such as aliens, secret government experiments, biological warfare, et cetra, and while many statements, stories, books, movies, and the like were made to that effect, it was really just a top-secret agricultural project; but in the efforts of remaining unsabotoged by competitors, they did nothing to discredit the wild rumors. Also, they did not develop weather balloons.

Now one fateful day in the history of Area 51, while the other scientists employed there at that time were searching for combinations of animals they could procure cheaply that would help with farming, a particular bored and unknown scientist thought it would be quite funny to use official government-given funds to secretly create a few duck-rabbit-things to release around the facility on the next April Fool's Day.

When that next April 1st came around and he let his secret creations roam around freely, he found out just how not amused his coworkers, bosses, and the federal government were; it took them about an hour and a half to find out who did it, where he was, and escort him to the project lead's office. He was then ordered to round up all of his creations and re-cage them, after which he was fired, and finally escorted securely out of the building. How he managed to sneak one duck-footed jack-rabbit out when he left, however, remains a mystery; and as the species mated with rabbits, they've rapidly begun to be birth their young without as many duck traits.

And the scientist, after his little excapade that day, was never again employed.
Nephila:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Nephila View Post
This is Day Two
This creature is a(n):Horned Devil Rat
This is its story:
This Mischievous extinct critter is known as the Horned Devil Rat. It was once prevalent in the same areas our beavers today now inhabit. They were hunted to extinction for their soft tail, and scent glands. It was also considered a pest because of it's hording behavior.
Comparable to the hoarding of a bower bird it has a fondness of shiny trinkets and bits of stolen papers. Unlike the famous bid It is purely for their own pleasure and not to win a mate. It keeps them in it's borrow and admires them often re arranging the setting. It guards it's ill-gotten goods jealously and will attack if you come within earshot. Luckily When they're out of the water their hearing isn't very good.

Angel Spirit Girl:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Angel Spirit Girl View Post
This is Day Two
This creature is a(n): Horned pond squirrel.
This is its story: This shy, pint-sized aquatic rodent is now quite rare. Its musk glands were often used in perfumery, and its soft fur was much sought after. Hunting and loss of habitat have reduced its numbers significantly from when explorers first discovered it in North America. Back then it was rather common to find them making beaver dam like nests across small streams or in the middle of ponds. The water offered protection and food because their webbed feet made them ungainly on land. Their favorite foods were pond vegetation, twigs, bark, roots and insect larvae. Their small horns were used in mating displays, and in self defense since they could be testy if cornered. Today one has to go to secluded wetlands to find them in the wild.


~LONGCAT~:
Quote:
Originally Posted by ~LONGCAT~ View Post
This is Day Two
This creature is a(n):Capaduk
This is its story: These guys are highly territorial, semi-aquatic mammals. Living in faster moving streams and rivers the Capaduk thrive by hunting small fish, worms, spiders, crustacean. They are armed with a paralytic neurotoxin which they use in hunting. Males confront each other in a showy display of teeth baring and horn clashing, rarely will they use their toxin in fights over territory or females.

blueblackrose:
Quote:
Originally Posted by blueblackrose View Post
This is Day Two
This creature is a(n): Red Footed Woodchuckin Pusabit
This is its story: The Red Footed Woodchuckin Pusabit is a strange creature to say the least. This animal is a long distance cousin of the beaver. Like a beaver it leaves near water sources like rivers, ponds, and lakes. Unlike their distance cousins the Red Footed Woodchuckin Pusabit do not build dams. The do swim, eat fish and chew on trees. This creature possesses oversized front teeth that are razor sharp. These teeth are used for defense and chewing on trees. It also communicates using clicking sounds that it makes using its teeth. It’s about to swim at speeds of up to 35 miles per hour using it’s red webbed feet. This little creature may look cute and furry, but don’t underestimate it because it can have a nasty temper.
Rochiel Silverfire:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rochiel Silverfire View Post
This is Day Two
This creature is a(n): Towanpool Harbor Rat (clades aquaticus)
This is its story:
The Towanpool Harbor Rat is a tenacious creature native to Towanpool Harbor (as its name would suggest). It is nonagressive towards humans, however it has developed an addiction to the minerals used in the construction and maintenance of Towanpool freighters. Using their strong horns and powerful legs, swarms of these creatures have been known to collectively charge a target freighter, puncturing its hull en mass and sinking it to the bottom of the bay. Once the vessel is brought down, the rats secrete an acid from a gland beneath their tail that rapidly breaks down the metal over a couple days. The rats then use their strong teeth to tear the metal sides apart, consuming much of it and carrying the rest back to their offshore colony for later consumption and nest building in much the same way that beavers do with wood. Despite the inconvenience they create with their feeding habits, they perform a complex and important role in creating coral reefs and adding essential minerals back into the ecosystem. In an attempt to work with the rats' habits rather than against them, Duvalians have taken to retiring old ships by sacrificing them to the rats in hopes that they will leave the working ships alone.

Last edited by Captain Howdy; 04-19-2013 at 03:38 AM..