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@_swift_fox_ Glide Martins. A lineage of pine Martin in Europe have become small, gliding predators of the canopy, using their ability to glide short distances as a way of ambushing arboreal animals like squirrels and songbirds.
@KebapAlts European zhivotnoe. These large pigs dwell in the forests of Europe, making the most of the variety of foods that they gut can process. Everything from leaves, to nuts, a tree bark, to carrion is seen as food to these trunked bores.
@ZefoZezo Bulky klunky. As various New World monkeys went extinct, they were largely replaced by kinkajou. Over the past millions of years, some have become massive and apelike, with the bulky klunky being not unlike Gorillas.
@MaverickPrimeGB Panda peccary, The mountains of Mexico hold bamboo that are eaten up by specialist peccary that have adapted retractable claws in order to pull down large grasses.
@WolfwalkerSnek European blind mole rat. Mole rats migrated from Africa to Europe during the ice age, when Europe was mostly grassland. This grassland has since changed into forest, with the mole rats now having adapted to life in temperate rainforests of Europe.
@ClippedWings22 Flange faced dogs. The Congo rainforest now stretches across Africa, creating a barrier between north and south savannas. The seven Savannah is dominated by dogs, The flange faced dogs are able to push the vascularised cheeks out of their mouth in order to cool down when running.
@nrd23456 Flat skippers, these camels are highly adapted for life on the salt flats. at any given time there is no more than 1 foot on the ground, to decrease contact with the hot soil. The inflatable uvula the modern camels is now flat and stuck out of the mouth in order to keep it cool.
@GaelCasasart Panda peccary, The mountains of Mexico hold bamboo that are eaten up by specialist peccary that have adapted retractable claws in order to pull down large grasses.
@SangliCannabis The largest reptile 20 million years in the future, Thunder throats are herbivorous Uromastyx that live in the mountains eating tough vegetation. They are social and communicate long distance by utilising the gas produced as a byproduct of digesting such tough plant matter.