10 Million Years PE: Okiina And Darsi

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10 Million Years Post Establishment: Okiina And Darsi

About 250 miles away from Almara are the connected continents of Okiina and Darsi. Although one would expect all the landbridges to have broken as of 10 million years PE, Darsi has actually begun moving north, making its way to collide with Okiina, not break away. The northernmost continent is Okiina, however, despite this it's still the warmest continent because of a warm air current and a lack of particularly tall mountains, and is home to some very exotic species of fauna. The southernmost continent of Darsi is a temperate land and houses the Darsinium Sea, coincidentally the warmest aquatic environment currently on Terra 2. Darsi will also be the first continent to see the formation of a desert, though this isn't for another 5 million years. As the fauna of both Okiina and Darsi begin adapting for the warm tropical temperatures, it seems that many will die off in the future eras as they're lead into a environmental trap, evolving to cope with warm, tropical temperatures just before an ice age. While many seem destined for nothing, some are in just the right ecological niche to survive the impending extinction event. Now let's take a look at those animals who are destined for death and those for survival in more detail.

Fauna

Capybara Descendants

Barvines

Meandering across the lush northern Okiinan praries lives the cow sized barvine. Standing 5 feet 6 inches at the shoulder, barvines are moderately large herbivores that share a common ancestor with the capyram overseas, only diverging about 5 million years ago when the two lands were still connected. With long, shaggy fur and a strong appetite for grass, the barvines seem perfectly prepared for the upcoming ice age. They weigh in at 140 lbs in larger species and consume around 20-30 lbs of grass every day, primarily feeding on grass and flowers. Although, like nearly all large herbivorous baras of this era, they are not obligate herbivores and often eat meat, albeit carrion. In fact, in a subset of the relatively varied group, their digestive tract has begun to specialise for digesting meat. On a continent that lacks the presence of proto-predators such as the hooksparrow, the baras have begun to fill this empty niche of opportunistic omnivore. Unlike what their appearance might tell you, these omnivorous mammals are preying upon small burrowers and birds more frequently. Some have even begun evolving to chase their meals, often chasing small subterranean animals like bunsters (small, burrowing hamsters closely related to the Almaran burrowjacks). Their jaws are strong and able to kill an unlucky prey item in just a few, though laboured, crunches.

Above; A juvenile Darsinium Barvine (Boscanis Flavumvirga or "Yellow Stripe Cow Dog") gives chase to a small bunster

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Above; A juvenile Darsinium Barvine (Boscanis Flavumvirga or "Yellow Stripe Cow Dog") gives chase to a small bunster. Though it hasn't grown its teeth fully and has little hunting experience, the youngsters practice is vital, for when it's in need of protein small animals may be the only source.

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