Female Hatchling

Female Hatchling
Name: unnamed
Species: Caerulean Hammerhead
Birthday: Thursday, September 25, 2014
Owner: Leorobin

Recent Clicks: Show/Hide
Stage Progress: 21.78%
Overall Progress: 63.96%

Element: Neutral An icon depicting the element Neutral

When a young caerulean hammerhead hatches from its egg, it is ready to fend for itself. Even though help isn't needed, however, you find that it is still appreciated by the tiny pup. Your hatchling is barely the length of your arm and has some difficulty catching the small flatfish in the saltwater pool where you keep it. Whenever you visit, you bring it small pieces of fish from the kitchens, which the pup devours as soon as they hit the surface. You have to be careful about where you place your fingers, for the pup can be nippy and seems not to distinguish well between tasty fish and less tasty fingers. Aside from your fingers, though, it learns to recognize you very quickly, and often swims over as soon as you appear at the bank. You are unsure of whether the hatchling has memorized your face, or if it relies on other senses to detect your presence - even at a young age, hammerheads are sensitive to the slightest vibrations in the water, and their sense of smell is legendary. You suspect that it might just be swimming over to everyone who approaches in the hope of begging for scraps.

Caerulean hammerheads are unusually social for sharks, often seen swimming and even hunting in small groups. During the breeding season in the Callisto Islands, these sharks gather by the thousands to swim out to the seamounts further east, much to the dismay of local fishermen whom they rob along the way. Caerulean hammerheads can eat almost anything they come across, but they tend to be pickier outside of the breeding season, preferring stingrays and flounder on the seabed to free-swimming fishes. Though caerulean hammerheads do not appear to have magical abilities, their peculiar heads are loaded with sensitive nerves which can detect vibrations and signals in the water, allowing them to locate prey that is covered by sand. When hunting in groups, one shark will chase a fish into a small reef while the other sharks come upon it from the sides, trying to pin it down with their heads. No one is quite sure how such maneuvers are coordinated, for caerulean hammerheads don't make noise to communicate. Though not as dangerous as the larger species of sharks, fishermen know to treat them with respect, for a large hammerhead can easily topple a small fishing boat or tear netting to shreds in order to reach a fresh catch. At the Keep, hammerheads must be given saltwater pools, for they are sensitive to minute changes in salinity.

Sprite art: Tekla | Description: PKGriffin