literal trillions of lantern fish migrate to the northern coast of the Pacific to spawn every year. Waiting with their mouths open, an early offshoot of Cerberus, wading hyenas, wait with Open jaws.

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Pulling his head from the lake bed, this sivdex pulls up a mouth full of water plants rich in salts and minerals. A decent breakfast for a long day of fishing and trudging in the lakes of Europe.

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lurching amongst the forests of the Pacific Northwest, the descendants of black bears walk but only on two legs. The Faz bear browsers for all varieties of food in the canopy.

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A good mother.

due to being birthed, Young dolphindiles cannot use the calcium of their eggs for the skeletons, and instead have cartilaginous bones. Mother helps by feeding calcium rich food to her baby.

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Aypa, these large South American otters primarily live on land. They can dispatch prey many times their size, and decorate their burrows with the skeletons of predator species.

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Batutut are a group of rain forest dwelling post humans from 20 million years in the future. Both males and females grow beards, but only dominant males grow moustaches… Boy.

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Artwork and the biology of Skydrops; tiny flying quadrilarerians from the birrin world.

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Trolls: complete!

Mud trolls behave a bit like hippos, but are actually browsers who move up cliffs to feed! Their predators, the Cliff trolls, attempt to ambush and cause them to fall from the cliffs they travel.

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The Trollverse Project has me doing a lot more drawing than usual. Pictured: Circits, cyborgs of the future, and a Predatory and Herbivorous troll. Unnamed as of now.

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Did a crazy amount of world building and troll biology during today.

From the oldest, to the smallest, to the weirdest, trolls all have at least one thing in common, a big old nose.

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So far on ...

We discover the Joschman as a unit of measurement for Cave Trolls, and a type of therizinosaur that releases broods from it's neck!

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Throw back to an old Spec Evolution dinosaur I made.

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Last week Tim Morris asked me if I could create a giant future rodent or lagomorph for and I decided I wanted to make it a high-browsing two-ton descendant of maras, which are sort of lagomorph-mimic rodents.

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I've reserved the wednesdays of for reinterpretations of Dougal Dixons specfauna from After Man. The first in line is the Arctic rabbuck (Ungulagus hirsutus) which I was always a bit disappointed with since childhood.

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