Sarcoraptor, More Commonly Called A Gliding Cutter, Are Small Gliding Ostoexoapo, Which Are The Closest

sarcoraptor, more commonly called a gliding cutter, are small gliding ostoexoapo, which are the closest living relative to the lampoelytron, they use long flat wide extensions of their shell to glide across the canopy of the machoran forests, due to their low weight and size they can glide for extremely prolonged periods of time, they use their dexterous foremost forelimbs to cut off small bits of skin of ostomesa as well as forcefully pull smaller ostomesa out of their shells and kill them, in their larval state they will usually eat eggs and ambush other larval ostoexoapo, if you have any questions about this seelenlos please don't be afraid to ask i'm more than happy to answer
-
bingobongobonko liked this · 1 year ago
More Posts from Speculative-world

biotapsora, more commonly called a scab tick, are very small seelenlos which are only visible after theyve begun feeding on their hosts, they have very flexible shells compared to other terrestrial ostoexoapo, which is useful to them since even though theyre very barebones under their shell, which is meant to be filled when they drink the blood of their hosts, they will run out of room relatively fast due to their size, they will begin to feed on their hosts after latching their legs into the skin of their host, they will routinely unlatch their legs and move them further out to accommodate their fastly changing size, their eyes are almost nonfunctional, only really capable of detecting movement, when they are ready they will release themselves off of their hosts and adjust their digestive system to be essentially an egg making factory, using any remaining nutrients to produce as many eggs as possible, once, they will die once producing their maximum amount of eggs due to the production speed, most eggs being still contained within their body, once these eggs hatch the larvae will eat other nearby eggs and their oviparents remains as well as any other nearby flesh, they will then use their eyes which function slightly better than their mature forms, they will look up around their surroundings and if theyre lucky they will find a host before they mature and latch on with specialized radula to said host, if they are less lucky they will climb onto a nearby plant or rock and use said specialized radula to latch onto it while they mature, if you have any questions about this seelenlos please dont be afraid to ask im more than happy to answer



maiaichthys, more commonly called an eggless bijaw, are large relatives of largetailed bijaws of the maschoran mountains, they tend to be the apex predators of their environments and are very territorial, even when they reproduce it usually ends in the graiparent dying, maiaichthys are ovoviviparous, which is a fairly rare trait for icthyongui, once their young is about to hatch they will lay their “clutch” on a nearby corpse or dense foliage, unlike most bijaws they have a set of fangs in their front jaws which they use in territorial disputes, to avoid oviparents attacking their young while they mature their clutches are very large and are usually “laid” outside of the oviparents territory, if you have any questions about this seelenlos please dont be afraid to ask im more than happy to answer



monocanthakrossos, more commonly called a stripetailed frill, are small seelenlos which riddle the maschoran forest, they have a unique trait in their distal digits on their forelimbs have an odd amount of flexibility being near opposable, their frill, like other members of their clade, is covered in tuberculate scales derived from suppressed archeina, they are very social organisms and use their tails to help communicate with each other, their diet is primarily composed of seeds and ostoexoapo, though they will opportunistically scavenge on corpses and fruits if they find them, they use their frill as a threat display alongside their oddly long fangs, unlike most members of their clade they dont use their frill for sexual display, instead using the stripes on their tail, monocanthakrossos chicks wont have these distinctive stripes instead having solid coloured tails or speckled tails, if you have any questions about this frilled seelenlos



microcorporuro, more commonly called a minnow ribbontail, are small ichthyongui which fill almost every body of ammonia in maschoran forests, and will swim in large schools as a form of self defense, their large tails which they use for sexual display and also a last stitch effort in defense, using it to hit their predator and hopefully gain some distance, though usually this effort is in vain, their teeth are almost completely vestigial due to how they interfere with their filterfeeding, they will usually reproduce with their schools by just passively releasing eggs and fertelizing them en masse, which helps keep their populations large, if you have any questions about these small populous seelenlos please dont be afraid to ask im more than happy to answer

astomaverm, more commonly called a wood worm, are unique ostoexoapo which fill the plants of the maschoran forest, their life cycle is rather unique to ostoexoapo having three life stages compared to the usual two life stages most ostoexoapo have, similar to most ostoexoapo they have their larval stage where they lack their shells and have no reproductive organs, they have a second stage which most ostoexoapo dont have, which is a stage similar to their larval stage where they have thicker skin, similar to a telluric velvet worm, and also functional reproductive organs, though they are incapable of laying eggs in this life stage, once they fully mature they gain their shell and lose the ability to eat, going so far as to lose their stomach, they wander around laying small clutches of about 5 eggs inside empty holes they find on any form of wood they find, this leads to a trend of large hoards of astomaverm bursting out of infested pieces of wood every year, if you have any questions about this seelenlos please dont be afraid to ask im more than happy to tell you