Smooth Operator/Species characteristics: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(7 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
NOTE: adding in some info about various species typically used in the furry genre. I will break this down into 2 headings per species. 1 is facts, facts about the species IRL. The other is society, how those facts would likely interact with the culture set in this world. (feel free to challenge on anything related to the culture portion.) | NOTE: adding in some info about various species typically used in the furry genre. I will break this down into 2 headings per species. 1 is facts, facts about the species IRL. The other is society, how those facts would likely interact with the culture set in this world. (feel free to challenge on anything related to the culture portion.) | ||
Also, if there is some form of social | Also, if there is some form of social hierarchy in this culture broken down by species, it would be from top to bottom on this list. I am assuming land mammals only as those are the ones that technically meet the definition of "furry" the best. Will update this list if the story content happens to expand into sea creatures or birds in the future. | ||
---- | ---- | ||
Line 75: | Line 75: | ||
SD: 1.5 | SD: 1.5 | ||
Range: | Range: 7 to 17 | ||
==Bears== | ==Bears== | ||
Line 103: | Line 103: | ||
SD:1.5 | SD:1.5 | ||
Range:9 to 18 | Range:9 to 18 | ||
==Raccoons and other small omnivores== | |||
'''Facts''' | |||
Raccoons are omnivores that can eat almost anything. They are generally not thought of as much, but they are actually incredibly hearty creatures. They are more or less the bears of the medium-size animal kingdom, and their small size is the only thing that keeps them from dominating the local food chain. Among any creature smaller than a dog, a raccoon is every bit as dominant a force as a bear would be among larger animals. Unlike bears though, Raccoons have learned a sense of timidness. | |||
Raccoons are among the smartest animals of the land-walking animal kingdom (outside of humans, of course.) They move in very large troupes, and tend to be migratory. They learn very quickly and are often rather brazen about their actions. They are mostly foragers and scavengers in terms of their diet, but they are capable of taking down prey as well should they encounter an animal smaller than they are. They will eat anything that can be considered food. | |||
'''Culture''' | |||
Raccoons are likely to be very brazen in their behaviors, taking an "I don't care, I'll do what I want" sort of attitude. They are still smart enough not to greatly violate social taboos to an extent that it will get them in a lot of trouble, but they will like to walk right up to the line of what's considered acceptable Vs. not and occasionally cross it a little if they think they can throw their weight around in order to get away with it. | |||
Due to the culture among raccoons, raccoon parents are not likely to teach their children a lot about social norms except what to be aware of and what will really get them in trouble. They are not likely to have a lot of rules in their own house. Most raccoons will likely live in a large household filled with mothers and sisters and aunts extending to who knows how far, and as a result are raised kinda wild with minimal adult supervision. | |||
In regards to sex, they are not likely to differentiate between consensual and non-consensual sex if the male initiates it since society doesn't make a big deal about men raping women anyway. They might warn their daughters a little not to pester boys too much if they seem like they don't want to do what they are asking, but if they encounter a boy they are likely to push him as far as he's willing to go until he starts seeming annoyed. They will also be told that society lets a boy do what he wants to a girl, it is completely up in the air as to whether or not they will give her details beyond that. | |||
'''Birth rates''' | |||
For such a hearty creature, raccoons tend to breed like crazy and have troupes that are large as a result. It is most likely they will not be that bashful about sex and do a poor job compared to most other species of shielding their girls from knowledge about it, but most non-raccoon males are likely to avoid raccoon households due to the large number of girls who will be wanting to climb all over him and not respect his personal space. This is one of the few things that would limit the growth of the raccoon population. Raccoons breeding strategies include breeding as young as possible. | |||
'''Age of puberty''' | |||
- Females, late 8 | |||
- Males, late 8 | |||
SD:1 | |||
Range:5 to 11 | |||
===Other small omnivores=== | |||
WIP | |||
==Small wild Canines (AKA, foxes)== | ==Small wild Canines (AKA, foxes)== | ||
Line 124: | Line 154: | ||
SD:1.3 | SD:1.3 | ||
Range:8 to | Range:8 to 15 | ||
==Small cats (non-domesticated, AKA wild cats and bob cats)== | ==Small cats (non-domesticated, AKA wild cats and bob cats)== | ||
Line 216: | Line 246: | ||
'''Birth rates''' | '''Birth rates''' | ||
Although they are predators, these animals are also often prey as well, mid-line on the food chain. As such, they often have a much higher birth rate than other predators. Of course, once again, the exception is the honey badger which could probably breed well if not for the fact that their bad attitudes tend to be off-putting to most males. It is strongly suspected that most of the honey-badger women who become pregnant may have raped young boys in order to | Although they are predators, these animals are also often prey as well, mid-line on the food chain. As such, they often have a much higher birth rate than other predators. Of course, once again, the exception is the honey badger which could probably breed well if not for the fact that their bad attitudes tend to be off-putting to most males. It is strongly suspected that most of the honey-badger women who become pregnant may have raped young boys in order to get that way, and are looked at with suspicion. | ||
'''Age of puberty''' | '''Age of puberty''' | ||
Line 262: | Line 292: | ||
Simian troupes operate in communes gathered around a single male. Due to the low birth-rate of males, there is no concept of subordinate males. A new troupe will be started when a male is born, often taking all the available females with him when he becomes of age. In this way, the low male population has effectively solved all the fighting and sexual politics that used to go on around simian troupes back when the males were more numerous and had to fight for the alpha position. The solution was that every male is an alpha of their own troupe of females now, regardless of how strong or weak they are. | Simian troupes operate in communes gathered around a single male. Due to the low birth-rate of males, there is no concept of subordinate males. A new troupe will be started when a male is born, often taking all the available females with him when he becomes of age. In this way, the low male population has effectively solved all the fighting and sexual politics that used to go on around simian troupes back when the males were more numerous and had to fight for the alpha position. The solution was that every male is an alpha of their own troupe of females now, regardless of how strong or weak they are. | ||
Females of other species rarely interact with simian troupes, however there are often female simians who will seek a male outside the troupe for a variety of reasons. | Females of other species rarely interact with simian troupes, however there are often female simians who will seek a male outside the troupe for a variety of reasons. This is especially the case with the smaller sub-races which are less inclined to move in troupes and are more disorganized in general. | ||
'''Birth rates''' | '''Birth rates''' | ||
Line 277: | Line 307: | ||
==large herbivores (deer, elk, ect...)== | ==large herbivores (deer, elk, ect...)== | ||
'''Facts''' | |||
Large herbivores tend to be prey only to the apex predators, and even become the preferred prey of the top-tier predators in any given region. Things like wolves, bears, large cats, and other powerful predators are the only things these animals fear (aside from, of course, man,) and may even turn aggressive toward other smaller animals they do not have to fear. | |||
Most large herbivores move in packs generally dominated by a single alpha male. The idea of an alpha male in wolf packs is a myth, but it is very much true among large herbivores. A single male will lead a herd of several females, and drive out any young males who are getting to be of reproductive age. | |||
'''Culture''' | |||
Large herbivores will have a natural grace to them and fancy themselves as being members of the high society of the world, often disregarding smaller herbivores and even small predators such as foxes. They will consider it beneath them to breed with a male of a smaller species, and will prefer males of apex predator species such as bears and wolves or their own large herbivore races. | |||
When encountering a male of one of the "acceptable" races, they will become highly submissive, a dynamic opposite of how they act toward all other races. If the male is of an apex predatory species, there will even be a little bit of fear, but that fear will be washed out by excitement (something of a species-wide rape-fantasy scenario.) | |||
'''Birth rates''' | |||
Large herbivore birth rates are at a rate of around 1 per doe per mating season, with the occasional case of twinning, making their birthrates almost identical to that of humans compared to other species that have much higher birthrates. However, due to their alpha-herd mating strategy, they tend to breed very quickly. | |||
'''Age of puberty''' | |||
-Females, late 12 | |||
-Male, late 13 | |||
SD: 1.5 | |||
Range: 7 to 17 | |||
==medium herbivores (goats, sheep, ect...)== | ==medium herbivores (goats, sheep, ect...)== | ||
Line 295: | Line 346: | ||
'''Age of puberty''' | '''Age of puberty''' | ||
-Female | -Female 7 | ||
-Male | -Male 8 | ||
SD: 0.8 | SD: 0.8 | ||
Range: | Range: 4 to 9 | ||
[[Category:Smooth Operator|Species characteristics]] | [[Category:Smooth Operator|Species characteristics]] |
Latest revision as of 01:48, 4 February 2023
NOTE: adding in some info about various species typically used in the furry genre. I will break this down into 2 headings per species. 1 is facts, facts about the species IRL. The other is society, how those facts would likely interact with the culture set in this world. (feel free to challenge on anything related to the culture portion.)
Also, if there is some form of social hierarchy in this culture broken down by species, it would be from top to bottom on this list. I am assuming land mammals only as those are the ones that technically meet the definition of "furry" the best. Will update this list if the story content happens to expand into sea creatures or birds in the future.
Special note: Standard deviation. Standard deviation is a phenomenon seen in any natural distribution, and it applies to age of puberty like anything else. 99.9% of any population will fall within 3 standard deviations of the average. The range measures 3 standard deviations above and below the average. (0.1% will fall outside of that range.) For instance, the actual average age of puberty in humans is 12.7 years of age, but there is a standard deviation of 1.5 years. This means the range of human age of puberty is 8.2 to 17.2 years of age. (You often hear about the younger end more often than the older end.)
A further note for those who want to know, the distribution within that range follows what is called a "bell curve." This means more will be closer to the average than the extremes. 68% will be within 1 standard deviation. (So, 11.2 to 14.2 for human puberty.) 32%, divided as 16% above and 16% below, will be in the 2nd standard deviation. (9.7 to 11.2 on the low end, and 14.2 to 15.7 on the high end.) And, finally, 5% (2.5% on each end) will be on the far ends of the normal distribution (8.2 to 9.7 low end, 15.7 to 17.2 high end.)
The same, of course, will apply to the races of this world, likely with standard deviations that adjust to their average (growing larger with higher averages and smaller with lower averages.)
(Standard deviation will be abbreviated SD) (The range will apply to female puberty, because that's the most pertinent to the story. Add 1 to both figures to get the male range)
Large cats
Fact Large cats are largely considered the apex predatory land species. This is true by technicality, but in actuality it is polar bears who truly hold that position.
Culture Large cats are likely at the top of society, as lions are considered to be the top among the top the other large cat species are likely to imitate lionesses in their deferral to males and large cats are likely to value males more highly than any other species does. Even with this being the case though, as apex predators, they are likely to have more respect for males of a predatory species, more respect for male large cats, and the most respect for the exceedingly rare male lions.
Birth rates Large cats would have low birth rates, and thus the level to which they value males would be even higher.
Age of puberty
-Female, 13
-Male, 14
SD: 1.5 Range: 9 to 18
Lions
Facts
Lions already have a low birth rate of males compared to females. Lions typically live in communities of 1 male to up to 20 females (usually no less than 5 females.) Despite the male lions being larger and stronger, their job is to protect the lion pride's home while the females do all the hunting.
Culture
Lions' already low male to female ratio would have gotten even worse. As such, male lions would be such a seriously rare commodity it's a question as to whether or not there is even a single male lion in any given state or province. As such, female lions will look to other species for males. Female lions are likely the ones who set all of the cultural standards in this new society in regards to how males are treated since it is them society will have been looking to since even before this situation occurred they were a society with a low male birth rate. Being made the cultural standard will have elevated the position of lions even higher.
Other large cats
Facts
Other large cats typically do not practice any form of pair bonding. The male of a given cat species other than lion does not stick around the female he impregnates, and the female large cat raise their young on their own.
Culture
Other large cats will have had their culture affected the least out of all the animal species by the change to society and will seem the most capable of functioning in this new society since it fits well with the practices they already had. However, female large cats will likely get caught up naturally in the tendency to imitate lionesses and feel more of a duty to protect the rights of males. They are not a species that would make huge demands on males in the first place, and they would also likely enjoy the status boost they get in society from imitating the cultural leadership position that lionesses have.
Large Canines (non-domesticated types)
Facts
Canine species are considered significant predators who, by working in groups, can even out perform members of the large cats. However, no individual Canine could take on a large cat 1 on 1.
Culture
Wolves would be considered the most noble among the large Canines. Meanwhile, other large Canines would generally be seen as more threatening. Wolves would likely be viewed in the manner one might see a soldier or a police man, where as other large K-9s like hyenas or coyotes are more likely to be seen in the same way one would a gang of ruffians.
Birth rates
Canines would have the highest birth rate of any predatory species.
Age of puberty
-Females, late 12
-Male, late 13
SD: 1.5 Range: 7 to 17
Bears
Facts
Most bears are omnivores and eat both meat and plants alike. Due to this omnivorous status, this allows them to become the largest and strongest land animal. However, due to the way the classification system for orders of predators goes, this omnivorous status actually demotes them and keeps bears out of the position of apex predator despite the fact that any bear could easily destroy any large cat. There are three exceptions to the omnivorous status of bears though. One is the panda and another is the Koala, both of which are strictly an herbivore (and the koala also being an exception to bears being large and powerful.) The other is the polar bear, which is strictly a predator. As such, the polar bear is the true land animal apex predator, but is less famous for it due to being in a family of omnivores.
Culture
Bears, despite their powerful nature, would not have much interest in influencing the culture. Bears, however, would be known to strongly value their children. Mother bears are more protective of their children than any other species. A female bear would be the classic helicopter parent, and would advocate for their own child at every possible turn. They are the one species most likely to violate the cultural standard on allowing males to get away with even rape if the rape victim happened to be her child.
(there are also likely to be fewer bears population wise in this setting.)
NOTE: Koalas are a large exception to everything related to bears, and are better to be categorized with and regarded as though they were fast moving sloths from the herbivore section.
Birth rates
Female bears have some difficulty becoming pregnant. However, due to the less social nature of bears, they are the most likely to use a sperm bank to become pregnant. However, fertile females who do meet an actual male, while being a bit socially awkward about it, will really want to try to be impregnated by him. (they will be bashful about it though and want their sex to be as secret and private as possible.)
Age of puberty
- Females, late 13
- Males, late 14
SD:1.5 Range:9 to 18
Raccoons and other small omnivores
Facts Raccoons are omnivores that can eat almost anything. They are generally not thought of as much, but they are actually incredibly hearty creatures. They are more or less the bears of the medium-size animal kingdom, and their small size is the only thing that keeps them from dominating the local food chain. Among any creature smaller than a dog, a raccoon is every bit as dominant a force as a bear would be among larger animals. Unlike bears though, Raccoons have learned a sense of timidness.
Raccoons are among the smartest animals of the land-walking animal kingdom (outside of humans, of course.) They move in very large troupes, and tend to be migratory. They learn very quickly and are often rather brazen about their actions. They are mostly foragers and scavengers in terms of their diet, but they are capable of taking down prey as well should they encounter an animal smaller than they are. They will eat anything that can be considered food.
Culture Raccoons are likely to be very brazen in their behaviors, taking an "I don't care, I'll do what I want" sort of attitude. They are still smart enough not to greatly violate social taboos to an extent that it will get them in a lot of trouble, but they will like to walk right up to the line of what's considered acceptable Vs. not and occasionally cross it a little if they think they can throw their weight around in order to get away with it.
Due to the culture among raccoons, raccoon parents are not likely to teach their children a lot about social norms except what to be aware of and what will really get them in trouble. They are not likely to have a lot of rules in their own house. Most raccoons will likely live in a large household filled with mothers and sisters and aunts extending to who knows how far, and as a result are raised kinda wild with minimal adult supervision.
In regards to sex, they are not likely to differentiate between consensual and non-consensual sex if the male initiates it since society doesn't make a big deal about men raping women anyway. They might warn their daughters a little not to pester boys too much if they seem like they don't want to do what they are asking, but if they encounter a boy they are likely to push him as far as he's willing to go until he starts seeming annoyed. They will also be told that society lets a boy do what he wants to a girl, it is completely up in the air as to whether or not they will give her details beyond that.
Birth rates For such a hearty creature, raccoons tend to breed like crazy and have troupes that are large as a result. It is most likely they will not be that bashful about sex and do a poor job compared to most other species of shielding their girls from knowledge about it, but most non-raccoon males are likely to avoid raccoon households due to the large number of girls who will be wanting to climb all over him and not respect his personal space. This is one of the few things that would limit the growth of the raccoon population. Raccoons breeding strategies include breeding as young as possible.
Age of puberty
- Females, late 8
- Males, late 8
SD:1 Range:5 to 11
Other small omnivores
WIP
Small wild Canines (AKA, foxes)
Facts Foxes and any other small-size non-domesticated Canines are typically burrowing species who hunt small animals. Foxes IRL can be raised as pets under certain strict standards, and they are known to be flexible in terms of whether they behave more like a cat or a dog. If a cat owner also has a fox, the fox will act like a cat. If a dog owner also has a fox, the fox will act like a dog. If someone owns a fox, but does not have any cats or dogs, the fox tends to behave in a way that's somewhere between a cat and a dog. Foxes prey on the same animals that cats do, but are superior hunters for the one fact that foxes can also burrow and they can dig up burrowing prey such as moles.
Another noteworthy thing about foxes IRL is that female foxes (also called vixens) are known for being quite vocal during sex.
Culture Foxes would likely be a physically active species known for being clever and creative in their problem solving. Having fewer males, the old stereotype of foxes being caniving will have largely disappeared and have been replaced with a reputation for being adaptable. However, with only female foxes, they will also likely be known for being seductresses and good at attracting males. Female foxes will likely know both from instinctual knowledge as well as being trained by their mothers how to best approach and attract a male, and how to non-awkwardly proposition them for sex in a way that does not violate this world's standards for not pressuring a male too hard. (being such an intelligent and highly adaptable species, they know how to get around the rules and get what they need)
Birth rates Fox birth rates will likely be no lower than those of their larger Canine cousins.
Age of puberty
-Female 11
-Male 12
SD:1.3 Range:8 to 15
Small cats (non-domesticated, AKA wild cats and bob cats)
Facts Small cats are a timid species that are the very definition of the middle of the food chain. They are very well adapted to escaping from larger predators while hunting small prey. Cats have excellent night vision, but the mechanism in the eye that gives them excellent night vision also harms their ability to see details. As a result, they become less able to see exactly what they are looking at but are very sensitive to motion. Small moving objects excite a cat's hunting instincts and cause them to instinctively pursue it.
Culture WIP (open for others to contribute)
Birth rates Cats have the highest birth rate of all predators. However, wild cats are more aloof and thus less likely to find each other at the appropriate times. Due to their mating habits rather than anything else, there are likely very few wild cats around.
Age of puberty
-Female 10
-Male 11
SD:1.1 Range: late 6 to 13
Domesticated Canine species (large)
Facts Canines in the form of wolves were among the first species domesticated by humans. Over the generations of selective breeding, selecting for loyalty and barking, which would warn the humans that there was something near, the domesticated wolves became what we now know as dogs.
In terms of comparing dogs to wolves, the behavior of domesticated dogs is mostly like an extended "puppy" phase. Older dogs still act like adult wolves, but their "puppy" phase is extended by several years by comparison to wolves.
Culture Larger dogs would be seen in a similar light to wolves, being noble protectors of the community like a police man. However, they would generally be taken less seriously in terms of leadership roles due to being seen as a more hyperactive and less mature equivalent to wolves. This would result in comparatively less respect, but this is only relatively speaking. The large dog would be seen in a similar light to a star of the football team who likes to party a lot, while the wolf would be seen as a star of the football team who is also very serious about their studies. Both are respected, but the wolf would be given a lot more respect.
Birth rates The birth rates of large dogs would be no different from wolves, but the easier life they would live would cause them to hit puberty slightly earlier.
Age of puberty
-Female 12
-Male 13
SD: 1.4 Range: 8 to 16
Domesticated Canine species (small)
Facts Small domesticated dogs are largely divided into two categories. Work dogs and toy dogs. The former category are usually in the category of hounds who are bred with a superior sense of smell and greater stamina for hunting than some of their larger cousins. Toy dogs tend to have strangely shaped ears, noses, or hair that grows in strange ways that is not so functional in practical application, and are meant for just being pets. There are also some places where the two cross, such as palmeranians which have several characteristics of toy dogs, but are actually bread in order to hunt rats on a farm and tend to do a better job of it than barn cats.
Culture Hounds and work dogs would be seen as the more serious working-man type role. It would be a lower class in society, but taken quite seriously. In some cases, more seriously than their large Canine cousins. The toy-dog varieties would be seen more like the vally-girl types. They have an attitude that will place them on the upper ends of the power scale most of the time just due to bombastically rolling over anyone who tries to challenge them, but nobody really takes them seriously.
Birth rates Their birth rates are still similar to the rest of the Canine species, but smaller size leads to even earlier puberty.
Age of puberty
-Female 11 (work dog) 10 (toy dog)
-Male 12 (work dog) 11 (toy dog)
SD:1.2 Range (work dog): 7 to 14 (6 to 13 toy dog)
Domesticated cat species
Facts Domesticated cats have lost a large amount of the skittishness characteristic of the wild varieties, but they are still quite timid compared to the likes of various K-9 species that never had an inherent timidness to begin with. Domesticated cats have the same eye structure that gives them excellent night vision at the expense of the ability to see objects in fine detail, as well as the hunting instinct triggered by moving objects. However, where the wild cats use this instinct for actual hunting and thus will be more likely to dismiss targets not interpreted as something they can eat, domesticated cats will attack almost any small moving object and will also hunt small animals even if they are not hungry due to their size and movement triggering the cat's hunting instinct.
Culture These are the more common variety of cats, and likely fill a roll typical to your standard white westerner IRL. They would be more likely to be middle class and are likely to hold opinions and standards of behavior that conform well to society. However, those cats who are in a comfortable middle class lifestyle are liable to be free to have some quirks.
Birth rates Cats have the highest birth rate of all predators, and due to the greater freedom possessed by the domesticated cats to act they can fully capitalize on this. Most small cat species are of the domesticated variety.
Age of puberty
-Female: low 10
-Male: low 11
SD:1.0 Range: 7 to 13
Other small predators
Facts There are several other small-size carniverous species about, such as weasels and badgers, or also the sables which live in eastern Asia. Most of these smaller predators tend to be sneaky opportunistic hunters with a rather noteworthy tollerance for pain and often possess the ability to deform their bones in order to fit between gaps. In the case of the honey badger, their tollerance for pain has reached flat out legendary levels to the point they can keep going after events that would seriously injure most other animals.
Culture Small predators are generally not looked at in an extremely positive light. However, they are also not seen as extremely threatening like the large K-9s (other than wolves) are. They would be more like the gofers or stoodges of a gang to the Hienas or Cyoties who run it.
The major exception to this would be the sables who have a level of beauty in their appearance good enough for them to hold a position similar to foxes.
The honey badger is the exception in the other direction. They tend to have bad off-putting attitudes but in a fight they are incredibly scrappy and while something like a large cat could probably win in a fight they would rather stay out of it, because the honey badger would last long enough to do some damage. Only bears and apex herbavors such as elephants and hippos have a good chance of winning in a fight against a honey badger.
Birth rates Although they are predators, these animals are also often prey as well, mid-line on the food chain. As such, they often have a much higher birth rate than other predators. Of course, once again, the exception is the honey badger which could probably breed well if not for the fact that their bad attitudes tend to be off-putting to most males. It is strongly suspected that most of the honey-badger women who become pregnant may have raped young boys in order to get that way, and are looked at with suspicion.
Age of puberty
-Female: late 9
-Male: late 10
SD:1.0 Range: 6 to 12
apex herbivores (elephants, hippos, and camels)
Facts Due to sheer size and the strength that comes with it, apex herbivores are no-one's prey. Not even bears or large cats will mess with them. While land-animals such as elephants and camels tend to be more docile in nature, the water-born hippos are very aggressive and territorial. All three of these types of animals tend to be very social, and travel in fairly large groups of their own species.
Culture The large herbivores would be seen in a similar respect to Bhudist Monks. They are not all that influential toward society, but it is largely agreed that you just do not mess with them. They are powerful, and they also tend to keep to their own.
With the possible exception of hippos, they would tend to largely go along with the cultural norms including that they would not harm a male even if he raped their daughter. However, said male would be marked by the entire apex herbivore community, and will be immediately shunned and shut out of their society. Absolutely no apex herbivore would even give them the time of day after such an incident, and he would be refused service at any store run by an apex herbivore.
Birth rates Due to nothing being able to threaten them, the apex herbavores tend to have the absolute lowest birth-rate of any species.
Age of puberty
-Female: 18 (20 for elephants)
-Male: 20 (22 for elephants)
SD: 2.0 Range: 12 to 24 (14 to 26 for elephants)
Special addition Tortises are the same in every respect to large herbavores in terms of survivability and the resulting low birth rate, except that they get their survivability from their shells instead of their size. They are not as social as the apex herbavores, but due to their similar attitudes they would be accepted in any elephant or camel community, and due to their water-born living the hippos would not have much of a problem with them either. It would not be the slightest bit uncommon to see a tortise hanging around in an apex herbavore community.
(Birth rates and age of puberty are the same as apex herbivores)
Simians (monkeys, gorillas, ect...)
Facts Most simians tend to move in troupes lead by one alpha male who gets first pick of the women in the troupe. Other subordinate males are also allowed in the troupe, they pair-bond with a single female, but the alpha male can also have sex with that single female as well if he decides he wants her. They also make no issue about whether the female is of fertile age or not, several simian species will have sex with juvenile females just as easily as adults.
There are a range of different types of simians in terms of size and strength. There are apes and guerillas as the largest and strongest, chimpanzees and orangutans at a fairly mid-range area, and macaque and marmosets at the smaller end.
Culture Simian troupes operate in communes gathered around a single male. Due to the low birth-rate of males, there is no concept of subordinate males. A new troupe will be started when a male is born, often taking all the available females with him when he becomes of age. In this way, the low male population has effectively solved all the fighting and sexual politics that used to go on around simian troupes back when the males were more numerous and had to fight for the alpha position. The solution was that every male is an alpha of their own troupe of females now, regardless of how strong or weak they are.
Females of other species rarely interact with simian troupes, however there are often female simians who will seek a male outside the troupe for a variety of reasons. This is especially the case with the smaller sub-races which are less inclined to move in troupes and are more disorganized in general.
Birth rates Simian birth rates depends on their size category, being low at the larger end and high at the smaller end.
Age of puberty
-Female: 9 (small) 11 (medium) 15 (large)
-Male: 10 (small) 12 (medium) 16 (large)
SD: 1.0 (small) 1.2 (medium) 1.7 (large) Range: 6 to 12 (small) 8 to 15 (medium) 10 to 20 (large)
large herbivores (deer, elk, ect...)
Facts Large herbivores tend to be prey only to the apex predators, and even become the preferred prey of the top-tier predators in any given region. Things like wolves, bears, large cats, and other powerful predators are the only things these animals fear (aside from, of course, man,) and may even turn aggressive toward other smaller animals they do not have to fear.
Most large herbivores move in packs generally dominated by a single alpha male. The idea of an alpha male in wolf packs is a myth, but it is very much true among large herbivores. A single male will lead a herd of several females, and drive out any young males who are getting to be of reproductive age.
Culture Large herbivores will have a natural grace to them and fancy themselves as being members of the high society of the world, often disregarding smaller herbivores and even small predators such as foxes. They will consider it beneath them to breed with a male of a smaller species, and will prefer males of apex predator species such as bears and wolves or their own large herbivore races.
When encountering a male of one of the "acceptable" races, they will become highly submissive, a dynamic opposite of how they act toward all other races. If the male is of an apex predatory species, there will even be a little bit of fear, but that fear will be washed out by excitement (something of a species-wide rape-fantasy scenario.)
Birth rates Large herbivore birth rates are at a rate of around 1 per doe per mating season, with the occasional case of twinning, making their birthrates almost identical to that of humans compared to other species that have much higher birthrates. However, due to their alpha-herd mating strategy, they tend to breed very quickly.
Age of puberty
-Females, late 12
-Male, late 13
SD: 1.5 Range: 7 to 17
medium herbivores (goats, sheep, ect...)
small non-rodent, non-lagomorph herbivores
rodent and lagomorph herbavores
Facts The rodent family (which includes everything from mice and squirrels to also include and gerbils) as well as the closely related lagomorph family (rabbits and hares) boast the absolute highest reproductive rate of any mammalian species. This is because the females of the species are literally ovulating almost exactly as frequently as other species are not ovulating. (as in, say, a human woman is ovulating for about 5 days out of a 30 day month. A female rodent would be ovulating for 25 days out of a 30 day month.) As such, rodents do not exactly experience heat cycles the same as most other animals do. Rather, they are just always ready to reproduce.
Culture Rodent species, due to their extremely high reproductive power, are likely to be the most populous species. While the sheer number of them likely hampers their social status, they are still considered important to the society because their large population means most of the males in the society will also be rodents just because of the numbers game. Predatory animals will likely prefer to have a male who is a member of a predatory species, but beggars can't be choosers.
Birth rates In addition to the female rodent's high reproductive ability and ease with which she gets pregnant, since rodents are a species classification primed for reproduction they are likely to become fertile the earliest of any species.
Age of puberty
-Female 7
-Male 8
SD: 0.8 Range: 4 to 9