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electreel β€” Terrestrial crustaceans

Published: 2011-09-10 15:58:15 +0000 UTC; Views: 2658; Favourites: 56; Downloads: 27
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Description The humid and warm world of the Allocene favoured the evolution of aquatic organisms into land ecosystems. All over the world many species of terrestrial crabs (not related and thus with not common ancestry) appeared, ranging from mangroves to rainforest canopy and floor, deep into continental land. Several of these species evolved inteligent and fantastic adaptative strategies in order to survive in such new and exotic world.
1- Common species of tree-dwelling crab from the European rainforests.
2- Long-legged crab with defensive spines as protection against predators.
3- Species of crab with remarkably long eye-stalks used during courtship rituals.

During early Allocene, a new island chain appeared in the middle of the Indian Ocean as consequence of the subduction of the recently formed western Subafrican plate under the Indoaustralian plate. In these islands some species of shrimps managed to take the niche of terrestrial crabs, and established the new family Unicornicaridae. Representatives of this family are remarkable for having long and powerful ambulatory legs, hyperthrophied cephalotorax, long rostrum (hence their name) and two great feather-like uropods, used during intraspecific contact (specially at courtship ritual)
4- Unicorn land shrimp (Unicornicaris vulgaris)
"5-" Peacock shrimp (Not drawn yet :s)
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Comments: 12

SonicCaleritas [2019-02-15 11:20:51 +0000 UTC]

I like the shrimp

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PeteriDish [2012-03-10 23:19:52 +0000 UTC]

Beyond cool!

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electreel In reply to PeteriDish [2012-03-10 23:54:38 +0000 UTC]

Thank you!

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PeteriDish In reply to electreel [2012-03-11 00:00:48 +0000 UTC]

You're welcome! Your pictures are amazing! I feel quite strange that someone as skilled as you finds my sketches fave-worty...

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electreel In reply to PeteriDish [2012-03-14 22:52:45 +0000 UTC]

Are you kidding? You have much more potential than me on imaginating a creating creatures. I mean... you are able to make them daily! You wouldnΒ΄t like to see my quick sketches... TheyΒ΄re complete craps.

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PeteriDish In reply to electreel [2012-03-14 22:56:46 +0000 UTC]

Thank you very much! But come on! I know you're being too modest now!

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electreel In reply to PeteriDish [2012-03-14 23:10:54 +0000 UTC]

Not at all I usually get fustrated with my illustrations, I even think that many sketches, like yours for example, are way more artistic than my illustrations.

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PeteriDish In reply to electreel [2012-03-14 23:20:27 +0000 UTC]

And don't forget you have to obey the genetic heritage of the animals you're making, a firmly set "rules", but I could set those rules for myself, many of the features of my beasts are "just for cool looks" and the use of the features and the evolutionary path had to be "found" additionally, so you have a much harder job than me!
And you do it well!

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PeteriDish In reply to electreel [2012-03-14 23:16:07 +0000 UTC]

But even if that was true, it doesn't matter, because the things you're able to use those sketches for and what you¨se able to build upon and around them is mindblowing! Simply fantastic! You might not upload as oftenly as me, but quallity over quantity, right?
No matter how you do it, the results are incredible!

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Leggurm [2012-03-06 08:00:43 +0000 UTC]

AWESOME! Reminds me of an idea I had for the Mediterranean salt flat in "The Future is Wild" cald a Vulture Crab. It wandered around the salt flats eating dead animals.

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electreel In reply to Leggurm [2012-03-06 20:27:53 +0000 UTC]

Thank you! And your idea is pretty cool! It might even fit into the project

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Leggurm In reply to electreel [2012-03-07 04:47:19 +0000 UTC]

Thanks!

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