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Sheather888 — The Mudwicket

Published: 2016-02-26 03:54:18 +0000 UTC; Views: 14830; Favourites: 266; Downloads: 0
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Description The seven-spotted mudwicket, Ranacephalus septulocus, is a plump, colonial species of mudwicket that thrives along the seashores and tidal estuaries of the Sierran Subcontinent (See Map) , where it dwells in large and complex burrow systems just below the high tide line. In most mudwickets males are larger and brighter than females, but females too in some species can carry some bright colors, and a female carrying a litter of offspring can become quite swollen in the days before pregnancy (pictured), rivaling the weight of her mate. Most species even at their extremes are hardly what could be considered large except on a relative scale, however; the seven-spotted mudwicket is an average 6.5 centimeters in length and just 1 - 2 ounces in weight. Though a descendant of the extravagant swordtail fish, their tails today, short and stocky, function for little more than an occasional boost of propulsion to dart down a burrow to safety.

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25 Million Years PE

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Fish

By the middle Tempuscenic, the live-bearing fishes have diversified enormously. From tiny colonists have radiated an enormous number of new lineages. Guppies give rise to dozens of distinct freshwater lineages, ranging from small minnow-like shoaling species to truck-sized riverine herbivores that may consume more than four hundred pounds of green food a day and give birth to as many as 100,000 free-swimming larval offspring in one litter. They give no parental care and even though they do not lay eggs, they still rely entirely on chance to reproduce and play the numbers game in hopes that one or two of their tiny infants will survive to maturity, for they contend with an onslaught of countless fierce new predators. From the platies and swordtails have arisen the swordwhales, lively shark-like carnivores with frightening, toothy maws that teem across all of the ocean's salt waters and supply their live young with a placenta-like tissue while in the womb, nourishing their embryos for prolonged periods in their bodies and giving birth to a much smaller number of large and extremely well-developed offspring. The swordwhale lineage has subsequently given rise to a number of veritably gigantic filter-feeders, some more than sixty feet in length and already vying as the largest bony fishes ever to exist. The livebearers have colonized the deepest ocean floor and the highest alpine stream, while the most enterprising among them have even begun to move towards the land.

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On warm, tropical mudflats, the bizarre Mudwickets, small but oddly-shaped creatures with squat toad-like bodies, bulbous eyes, huge mouths, and flattened bellies, hop from the tide and onto the shore to hunt seaside insects and crustaceans with needle-like teeth and over-sized crunching jaws. Distant relatives of the swordwhales, they crawl about on the sand with webbed hand-like pectoral fins and periodic thrusts of short tails, which function like a spring to catapult them to safety in times of danger, and survive above the water by absorbing atmospheric oxygen through a highly vascularized plate on the roof of the mouth and to a lesser extent though their skin in a manner akin to salamanders. So long as these structures remains moist, they allow the fish to survive indefinitely out of the water. Mudwickets are terrestrial from birth, able to breathe air from infancy, and will drown if trapped for a prolonged period in deep water; their gills diminished and their swim bladders vestigial, they can no longer swim. Instead of retreating to the water when danger threatens they rush to complex, communal burrows just below the high-tide line, which may extend five feet below the ground and consist of a series of flooded chambers. Every chamber in a burrow holds a large air pocket which can only be kept fresh and oxygenated through strenuous, repeated trips back and forth to the surface at every low tide, the fish bringing up a mouthful of depleted air and then back down a bubble of new, clean air with each descent to fill its reserves. These air pockets keep the fish alive when high tide returns and covers the burrow system in as much as four feet of water. The Mudwickets' burrows may be used by as many as two-hundred fish at any one time and can become quite complex. Different chambers are utilized for different purposes - the deepest chambers are for the storage of excess food, which lasts longest in relatively low-oxygen, cooler conditions, while the warmest, most oxygenated, shallow chambers near the surface are used as nurseries in which they give birth. The infants are large and well-developed when they leave the mother's body but remain underground for a considerable time before ever leaving to hunt on their own, being fed by the colony's adults. This appears to be an unintentional effort - the mudwicket having a tendency to drag its prey underground before feeding (to prevent it being stolen by a competitor or attracting a predator), thus allowing the young to gather around and gather the scraps, but it is effective nonetheless.

The young mudwickets will remain underground while growing fat on their parent's scraps for as many as thirty days before they emerge from the burrow for the first time to hunt on their own and begin to pull their weight in maintaining the burrow. Individual colonies of mudwickets are male-dominated and these males, which are large and brightly ornamented, are fiercely territorial toward their same-sex neighbors, but as a colony grows a single male cannot possibility mate with as many females as he might control, giving males on the outskirts of the colony without harems of their own a chance to mate when the females come above ground to feed. Young males are driven from the colony at maturity, the lucky few to survive long enough to start a new burrow system beginning their own new harems and colonies, the rest surviving in only small shelter burrows and relying on sneak attacks to mate with other males' unguarded females to spread their genes. When a predatory bird threatens, every fish on the shore will vanish in an instant into the sand and seal the entrances of their burrows with a plug of mud until they are certain the threat has vanished. It is not unusual for a colony to remain entirely underground for an entire day after a fright, feeding on the invertebrates they have amassed in the lower chambers of their burrow system until they can be certain the danger has gone.

Most of a mudwicket's diet consists of insects, hermit crabs, and other arthropods along with the occasional small fish trapped in a tidepool, though large species may occasionally ambush small birds. One genus specializes in bivalves, making regular forays down steep rocks into deep tide pools to pull them from submerged stones, then crushing the shells with enormous squared-off teeth to get at the meat. Conversely, another has evolved to forage quite far up the beach and away from the surf, having abandoned colonial existence for small and solitary burrows near the treeline at the end of the beach which just tap the underground water table. One particularly promising family of mudwicket has in fact left the seaside environment completely and moved far inland, following rivers and building its burrows in the muddy banks of freshwater ponds and streams. Here they prey on crayfish and aquatic insects as well as land invertebrates such as crickets and snails, that they may forage for as far as fifty meters from the water, crawling through damp leaf litter and even scaling small logs and fallen branches in the process. In rainy conditions, members of this group may travel over a mile inland to reach isolated sources of water, digging into damp soil or hiding under logs to keep damp in between open pools of water. Most solitary inland species are colored cryptically, but a small number are extremely vibrant and impossible to miss in shades of blue, red, and yellow, advertising deadly toxicity in the mucous of their skin that they engineer from their diets, which incorporate a significant amount of poisonous ants.
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Comments: 13

KacperKowalski [2022-05-06 11:47:31 +0000 UTC]

👍: 5 ⏩: 1

bayu551 In reply to KacperKowalski [2024-09-13 17:07:07 +0000 UTC]

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

TuxedoSuchomimus [2021-03-17 08:25:33 +0000 UTC]

👍: 6 ⏩: 0

Constrict0r12 [2017-04-23 06:30:22 +0000 UTC]

DERP FISH

👍: 1 ⏩: 0

Fireplume [2016-02-29 13:36:00 +0000 UTC]

"It's so ugly it's cute"

👍: 2 ⏩: 0

herofan135 [2016-02-27 13:56:29 +0000 UTC]

This one is really cool, and oddly cute, haha. I like it. ^^

👍: 2 ⏩: 0

HUBLERDON [2016-02-27 02:31:37 +0000 UTC]

Sweet!

👍: 1 ⏩: 0

marghecaspani [2016-02-26 15:16:35 +0000 UTC]

I don't know why but I find him so cute *^*

👍: 2 ⏩: 0

TheDubstepAddict [2016-02-26 15:05:31 +0000 UTC]

Cool. I need one for my aquarium

👍: 1 ⏩: 0

Chaptor-C [2016-02-26 14:21:13 +0000 UTC]

-Look at that little ugly face!
-It's PERFECT.

👍: 2 ⏩: 0

AGmantheAG [2016-02-26 05:54:34 +0000 UTC]

Since this is the bird planet, well that's what I call it, I thought this was a bird. The day a bird is no longer a bird. 

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

FrustratedInExcelsis [2016-02-26 05:09:24 +0000 UTC]

Oh, I like these guys. Definitely looking forward to seeing where they'll end up.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Megasupream In reply to FrustratedInExcelsis [2016-11-19 05:02:43 +0000 UTC]

Yes. Will they evolve into amphibian-like creatures? Who knows! It would definitely happen after we die though...

👍: 1 ⏩: 0