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The Carnivores friend

PostPosted: May 2nd, 2012, 5:17 pm
by untamedemo
Name: Pika (Pie-Kah)
Species: Bushbaby
Gender: Male
Age: 1 yr
Home: The jungle where Simba, Timon and Pumbaa lived.
Personality: He like to spend time with his best friend Moyo, a cape hunting dog. they do a lot of night wandering because he is nocturnal. he does however meet her during the day on occasions. He loves to talk and tell stories just like Moyo. He will often sit on Moyos back as they wander through the jungle and talk for hours about anything he can think of. He meets other carnivores but only with Moyo around and becomes friends with them also, Moyo is a sort of protection from preditors. He will miss his good friend when she moves to start her own pack.
History: He was born a few days late, which his mother and father think is why he is so high strung and does "irrsponsible" things. Pika just likes things different and wants to make as many friends as he can no matter what species. He meet Moyo when he was 10 months just leaving his parent they immidiately became good friends with her kind nature and love for exploring.
Crush/Mate: none
Best Friend: Moyo
Featured In: none yet
Image this is what bushbabies look like. most stay with their parents until 10 months of age but femals may stay longer. they can can turn their heads around like an owl. "Senegal bushbabies are nocturnal, moving about at night. They usually stay in trees, hanging vertically, or up and down, on tree trunks. They move by making long leaps from branch to branch, up to 10 to 13 feet (about 4 meters). They also can kangaroo-hop on the ground.--bushbabies usually feed on the gum, or liquid, from acacia (uh-KAY-shah) trees and insects. Bush babies have large, round eyes for good night vision and batlike ears that enable them to track insect prey in the dark. Fast, agile and accurate, they catch some insects on the ground and snatch others from the air. As they jump through thorn bush or thick growth, they fold their delicate ears flat against their heads to protect them. They fold them during rest, too." i got this info from...http://www.awf.org/content/wildlife/detail/bushbaby and http://animals.jrank.org/pages/2932/Bus ... OUNTS.html