
Yet another imaginary critter. This is what I like, animals that are big, ugly, weird and aggressive!
Genus & species: Grima vermiglossus
Meaning of: Grima Wormtongue (literally) after a J. R. R. Tolkien character
Ancestral creature: Alligator Snapping Turtle Macrochelys temminckii
Size: up to 300 lbs
Activity cycle: diurnal
Habitat: temperate woodlands and coastal marshes
Social structure: solitary
Diet: birds, small mammals, small reptiles
The mudlick strongly resembles the ancestral alligator snapping turtle. It is much larger, however, and once mature lives almost entirely on land. To support its great weight, the mudlick has developed stumpy, elephantine legs. Bony nodules protect the exposed neck, limbs and tail. The mottled brown and green coloration, the thickly ridged carapace, horns and warty outgrowths form an effective camouflage. When immobile, the mudlick is easily mistaken for a mossy boulder or chunk of rotten wood.
Like its ancestor, the mudlick sports a pair of brilliant pink tendrils on the tongue. The turtle lays immobile with its jaws gaping and twitches the appendages, which look like a squirming worm. Prey literally walks right into the mudlick’s mouth. All it has to do is snap its razor-edged jaws closed, with such force that larger specimens are capable of shearing off a man‘s arms. These turtles are extremely aggressive, and should be approached only with great caution, if at all.
Juvenile mudlicks hatch in batches of 60-100 from eggs laid near the water’s edge. They spend their early years hunting any freshwater organisms they can catch and getting their growth on. At twelve years old and about thirty pounds they move onto land. It takes almost forty five years for a mudlick to reach sexual maturity, and they have been known to live several hundred years. The rate of growth slows but never entirely stops - there may be enormous specimens lurking in the unexplored backwoods.
Genus & species: Grima vermiglossus
Meaning of: Grima Wormtongue (literally) after a J. R. R. Tolkien character
Ancestral creature: Alligator Snapping Turtle Macrochelys temminckii
Size: up to 300 lbs
Activity cycle: diurnal
Habitat: temperate woodlands and coastal marshes
Social structure: solitary
Diet: birds, small mammals, small reptiles
The mudlick strongly resembles the ancestral alligator snapping turtle. It is much larger, however, and once mature lives almost entirely on land. To support its great weight, the mudlick has developed stumpy, elephantine legs. Bony nodules protect the exposed neck, limbs and tail. The mottled brown and green coloration, the thickly ridged carapace, horns and warty outgrowths form an effective camouflage. When immobile, the mudlick is easily mistaken for a mossy boulder or chunk of rotten wood.
Like its ancestor, the mudlick sports a pair of brilliant pink tendrils on the tongue. The turtle lays immobile with its jaws gaping and twitches the appendages, which look like a squirming worm. Prey literally walks right into the mudlick’s mouth. All it has to do is snap its razor-edged jaws closed, with such force that larger specimens are capable of shearing off a man‘s arms. These turtles are extremely aggressive, and should be approached only with great caution, if at all.
Juvenile mudlicks hatch in batches of 60-100 from eggs laid near the water’s edge. They spend their early years hunting any freshwater organisms they can catch and getting their growth on. At twelve years old and about thirty pounds they move onto land. It takes almost forty five years for a mudlick to reach sexual maturity, and they have been known to live several hundred years. The rate of growth slows but never entirely stops - there may be enormous specimens lurking in the unexplored backwoods.
Category Artwork (Digital) / Animal related (non-anthro)
Species Turtle / Tortoise
Size 900 x 657px
File Size 538.1 kB
I want a time machine so I can have one of these as a pet. I used to have a standard issue snapper as a pet . . . it was an awesome little critter. I kept it over the winter and released it into lake bomoseen. After all those months feasting on goldfish and raw chicken, it was probably the biggest baby turtle in the lake.
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