Notes for Zohar III, a planet I'm designing in full for shits and giggles. Feel free to ignore, I'm using this place as a backup since this is where the thread is/was.
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OVERVIEWZohar III is infamous for addictive biology. The entire planet has a high water vapor level, and creatures communicate at least as much through scent and pheromone as they do sight and hearing. Chemical weapons and defenses stand more prevalent than claws and fangs, already clumsy and prone to overheat thanks to the high gravity coefficient and choking humidity. The packed oxygen, nitrogen, and water make for wildly dominant plants that the animals creep between and over, scraping out a living as the vast arboreal entities battle for sunlight and survival. A uniquely crystalline atmosphere, clear quartz stripped of color and borne aloft by raging winds, refract the tidal sunlight and spread it over the planet evenly, so that there are no day or night, only a sort of sullen evening. These clear sandstorms rage high overhead the plant layer, making local flight impossible and colonization, as a result, impractical. Life has to exist at the terrestrial level here, and without airlift or supplies, it looks unlikely. The local ecosystem is voracious and adaptive.
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SPOTLIGHT: THE MANGROVESThe life pod makes it first to the mangroves, an ecosystem based in a saltwater delta. An aquifer has cracked the surface nearby, but heavy salt veins underground have rendered the water undrinkable. The ecosystem is instead based on the mangrove titans, enormous trees that rise on complex root systems from the saltwater below. They filter the salt out, extruding it in thick coats from their roots, and drawing purified water up through their trunks to the canopies high overhead, safe from most grazing herbivores. Soil cover is nonexistent and the footing is limited to either roots or wading through the shallows below, though shallow is a relative term - the water level varies from three to four feet at the edge of the mangrove to about fifteen closer to the aquifer.
As a result, terrestrial fauna is light on its feet and never rises that far in size; they have to be able to bound from one mangrove to the next, looking for the precious water sealed under the tough bark. The mangroves defend themselves with latex veins that can gum up mouths or claws, and natural wellsprings that form deep in the heart chambers, encouraging the wildlife to fight over freely available water rather than hacking through the tough bark.
The competition over these natural spigots is unbelievably intense; closer to the water level, in between thick root systems, oversized and vicious ant colonies reign supreme in an eternal war against each other. They evolve acidic sprays, chemical defenses, and false pheromone trails to lead each other to their doom, while colorful gather near the underside of the roots and try to knock prey loose, each dog-sized insect a hefty source of protein. Some leap and crash into the underbrush with armored skulls and powerful fins to propel them upwards, battering aside their predators with equal verve. Others have evolved pressurized gills that blast spurts of water up above, knocking ants from their perches with unbelievably accurate sprays of water. These colonies thus form the basis for an entire ecosystem of predatory fish in the waters below, feeding on the insects and each other.
Higher up, as the roots become less tangled and the trunks solidifies into cavernous columns, the competition includes more than just ants. Tiger beetles, rapidly moving predators that skirr across the mangroves, form nests in crevices, each darting faster than the eye can keep up and consuming ant scouts and queens in blurring strikes, establishing a skirmish line against the encroaching colonies. Thickly furred climbing mammals, their flexible coats impervious to the clutching mandibles of their insect neighbors, wade through the competition with disdain, picking up choice specimens and cracking their exoskeletons with curved claws, repelling others with foul pheromone stenches that confuse the nose.
Without exception, though, all these forms of life stay under cover, out of the sunlight. For up above in the open air, at the canopies staring down, the aviants reign supreme over this entire ecosystem. Enormous birds with specially adapted wings, their phalanges strengthened and dense enough that they can only glide, not properly fly - but that's enough to grant them a stooping strike from overhead branches that can crack open any defenses the planet can offer, crystalline beaks shattering chitin and piercing fur alike.
Aviants stand about five feet tall and their wings have specially-designed thrusting spikes with curled hooks, suitable for climbing up tough bark, puncturing it, or pinning down prey for consumption as needed. As said, they are no longer true fliers, but on the hot thermals rising from open water in the early afternoons. aviants tend to glide further inland in search of large prey, and return in the evening on land breezes as the earth cools faster than the water, pushing thermal columns back over the aquifer.
In the heat of noon, then, local life is a little more free to search for food or a mate, but when the sky turns orange the upper trees are barren and empty, as the aviants soar overhead in croaking flocks from one thick trunk to another.
Aside from the mangrove titans, local flora is limited due to the consistent presence of salt; any plant that survives in this area is a halophyte out of necessity, since they either grow in saltwater or must contend with the salt extrusion the mangrove titans use to both filter it out of their systems and defend against parasites and climbing vines. There are pockets of fungal flowers that grow on leaf litter midway up the titans, which draw water vapor from the air itself and reproduce on spores flung into the daily breezes. Some vines have also evolved to tolerate the salt deposits of the mangroves, working their dendrites in under the bark to suckle on water veins, where the latex doesn't kill them instead.
The vast majority of flora, instead, have turned to predation as a source of protein and energy. Rampant entomological competition serves as a feast for anything capable of entrapping them, so pheromone-filled pitchers, bladderworts, and sundews are omnipresent on the lower levels, looking to lure curious scouts or workers to their doom. Other flytraps and catapult traps leave out succulent, edible stamen or fruit equivalents, trapping the offerings with tendrils that snap closed once touched that blast soporific vapors when disturbed. Still others are quietly toxic mosses that creep in and poison the titanwells, feasting on the bodies that lay about as mute warning.
Life in the mangroves is cheap, and all too easily snatched.
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SPOTLIGHT: THE OYSTER SHALLOWSThe root systems surrounding the mangrove titans is plastered with oyster beds that filter nutrients from the ecosystems above and from the aquifer itself, creating the bedrock for its own community. Oyster beds provide safe breeding and feeding grounds for hundreds of species of fish that live throughout the tremendous aquifer, for hiding places are abundant in the enormous and emptied oysters and the calcified spat attached to them. Wider water channels wind their way through these beds, creating a labyrinthine paradise underneath the mangroves.
The oyster shallows are a dim existence - sunlight filters only fitfully through the thick, tangled root systems the titans weave underneath themselves, illuminating the living carpet of ants that work their way through the roots above. Dozens of species of fish have evolved ways to knock these ants off into the water below, where the jorah, a local family of fish that travel in aggressive schools through the main channels. Anything that falls into the water is swiftly tugged into the oyster beds and shredded by jorah, with everything else gleefully picking away from the sides - jorah, perhaps intentionally, don't evolve large enough jaws to predate on other fish in an effective manner, but are fantastic at taking tough chunks of chitin out of exoskeletons. They thus live in large, interchangeable schools with archerfish, hammerheads, and the other varieties of fish that specialize in knocking loose ants for the school.
These schools keep to the centers of the channels as best they can - they're prime food for the amphibious ratrawls, a quadrupedal amphibian that dominates most of the oyster beds. They use a chemical compound in their mouths to form quickly-hardening spit, and use that spittle to create shallow-water beds and dens atop the highest oyster banks. From these vantage points they fish in the channels, trying to pick out from the jorah schools with rapid dives. Ratrawls live in small family packs and remain distinct for their ululating croaks that can be heard anywhere in the mangroves during the cool hours of morning and evening, a hefty, deep-chested call.
Ratrawl pads are their own little centers of life - various crabs, starfish, and other microbiology life scratch out lives in the side and the undercarriage of their spittle-spun docks. The amphibians themselves are omnivorous and will eat anything they can get in their mouths with their flexible paws, but are clumsy out of the water and can't dig their own building material out of the way once it sets.
The masters of the oyster beds are huaromin - a nickname in another language that translates to "shore rattler". Indeed, these are tremendous snakes averaging anywhere from a dozen feet to much longer in length, with armored scales and a thick bone-mantled tail that they vibrate against the oyster beds, battering them to pieces to create the steep ravines they swim through. Huaromin channels, rather than the five-to-fifteen foot depth the rest of the oyster beds average, can be as much as thirty to forty feet deep and perhaps ten feet wide, riverlike ravines that cut through the beds and leave channels for the titans to put down new roots into the soil underneath. The great rattlers themselves feed on large prey - ratrawls are a favorite delicacy, when they dive too far into the channels hunting the schools, and rattlers are also infamous for using the vibrations of their tails to knock loose dozens of ants at once, creating a feeding frenzy that they can leisurely pick off jorah from, rather than hunting down the schools when they're on the defensive.
Huaromin themselves are bioluminescent, and the sight of them slowly winding their way through the channels is awe-inspiring - but deceptive. They turn off the display while hunting, and flare it bright on attack, to stun and dazzle their prey.