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 Marsupials on Toril

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T O P I C    R E V I E W
sleyvas Posted - 02 Aug 2013 : 18:38:13
Reading Ed's recent article on the Halarkenblood family (couriers who transport goods within their bodies), made me think about Marsupials and carrying things in their pouch. That made me wonder, are there any canon instances of marsupials on Toril (one can make an assumption that perhaps in Osse they might be found, but that would be trying to make Osse more like Australia). I suspect somewhere there MIGHT be a reference to an opossum, but I can't recall one. In thinking about it, my mind went to the idea of armor clad dire kangaroos with halflings riding in their pouches and Halflings mounted on dire opossums and dire "spotted tailed native cats" also known as a quoll


I used my google-fu to see if I could come up with a list to compare against.

List of Earthly Marsupials
Kangaroo
Wallaby (some kind of smaller kangaroo)
opossum
koala
Tasmanian devil
sugar glider (looks like some kind of flying squirrel)
wombat
numbat
spotted-tailed native cat / quoll (looks like a weasel/cat mix)
crest-tailed marsupial mouse
marsupial mole
bandicoot (called a pig-rat/some kind of mouse with a long snout)
21   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
Barastir Posted - 28 Jan 2019 : 11:21:35
quote:
Originally posted by lookatroopa
The thylacine and its jackalwere-like shapeshifting kin from Monstrous Compendium Appendix III, while erroneously referred to as felines, are marsupials.



The FR thylacine is a different animal than the marsupial in RW. Same name only.


EDIT: format
lookatroopa Posted - 25 Jan 2019 : 17:56:57
The thylacine and its jackalwere-like shapeshifting kin from Monstrous Compendium Appendix III, while erroneously referred to as felines, are marsupials. The zorbos from Tomb of Annihilation are based off of koalas and can therefore also be considered marsupials.
sleyvas Posted - 06 Aug 2013 : 13:22:04
quote:
Originally posted by BadCatMan

Actually, the opossum is an American animal, found throughout North and Central America:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opossum

Meanwhile, the possum is a related species found in Australia and South-East Asia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Possum

One starts with an 'o', the other doesn't.



interesting... I never realized this, I always thought it was just a different spelling, but the two creatures are significantly different (one has a bushy tail, the other a longer snout).
Barastir Posted - 06 Aug 2013 : 12:37:39
quote:
Originally posted by Mournblade

Evolution is not a viable method of life generation in the D&D Worlds. Clearly the realms had a creator race. That throws evolution out the window.

Not necessarily... Maybe many races were originally created, by one or more races and/or deities, and afterwards natural selection pressed on regional or minor speciation.

Besides, magic could accelerate evolutionary processes. Have you ever seen the 2e Chronomancer book?

Edit: This is not a Realmsian book, but an AD&D sourcebook about time dimension and magic. Look specially for the "Devolutionary warrior" spell, it has a interesting point about evolution and elves...
The Sage Posted - 06 Aug 2013 : 04:14:12
quote:
Originally posted by Old Man Harpell

I used a variant of the Iron Kingdoms in Osse, ...
Oh, no you don't. You can't just drop something like this into a conversation without explaining it further.

Let's hear about this variant of the IK you've based in Osse. It sounds positively intriguing.
BadCatMan Posted - 06 Aug 2013 : 04:11:27
Actually, the opossum is an American animal, found throughout North and Central America:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opossum

Meanwhile, the possum is a related species found in Australia and South-East Asia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Possum

One starts with an 'o', the other doesn't.
Old Man Harpell Posted - 05 Aug 2013 : 08:10:58
quote:
Originally posted by The Sage

I agree with sleyvas on being careful about the assumption with the "Osse as Australia" comparison.

Aside from a few obvious examples in the Lady of Poison novel, I usually don't agree with the many who say that Osse is a direct translation of, or heavily influenced by, Australian Aborigine culture. Gunggari's mannerisms aside [as well as his dizheri], it could be said that the supposed "ways" of the Osse people are very well be associated with many other examples of Polynesian tribal cultures. I always thought the actual name "Osse" was a bit of a joke as a matter of fact...


Considering where you live, Sage, it makes sense to defer to your perceptions, but if I may:

I always looked at Osse exactly as a quasi-analog of Australia - the name and its presumed pronunciation, Osse (pronounced 'Aussie'), with many of the same features as your homeland (and more besides, as Osse at least appears to occupy more landmass than Oz does). I would also assume the plant and wildlife to be similar - no other place on Toril would have many of the things Osse does, just as Down Under here on Spaceship Earth has things found nowhere else (zoos and the like notwithstanding).

Now, I will grant that it would not be automatically a place for anything like the Aboriginal or Maori peoples - that may be stretching it a bit. Maybe at some point in the past, sure, hence some similarly-sounding names gleaned from carvings or writings from a vanished civilization, but what's to say the RSE's that we all know and lo - well, know, at least, might not have brought something utterly foreign and exotic into those places?

I used a variant of the Iron Kingdoms in Osse, but otherwise, a native Australian transposed would have immediately been able to recognize many things, plant and animal life in particular. One of these days, I may even be able to afford a trip to Australia so I can get a handle on what I've been assuming all this time.

- OMH
Mournblade Posted - 05 Aug 2013 : 05:53:23
Evolution is not a viable method of life generation in the D&D Worlds. Clearly the realms had a creator race. That throws evolution out the window. Which works for a fantasy world even if the creation notion is ridiculous for this one.

Marsupials are the result of Australia separating from antarctica and india, and not having the selection pressures to advance to the placenta.

Marsupials are merely a 'less advanced' form of mammal, and should be able to be placed anywhere in the realms.

Afterall we place North American Fauna with European Fauna without a thought. Why should placing Australian wildlife in a faerun ecosystem be any different? The only thing I am cognizant of is placing the marsupial in the climate zone it is commonly found.

Consider this: Having a Reindeer and a Raccoon live in the same forest, is as mismatched as having a wallaby and a raccoon live in the same forest.

Raccoons are indigenous to North America.

Place marsupials wherever you want them. Faerun ecology is not in any way parallel to Earth's.

Markustay Posted - 04 Aug 2013 : 14:01:51
I wonder why we never got an official Marsupials of Faerūn?

In 2e, we would have gotten a Complete Marsupial Handbook.
rjfras Posted - 04 Aug 2013 : 00:40:06
Elminster's Ecologies: Explorer Manual

The section the marsupials reference comes from is about Cormyr.
sleyvas Posted - 03 Aug 2013 : 21:35:24
quote:
Originally posted by rjfras

quote:
Originally posted by Jorkens

The only ones I can think of (except for opossums mentioned in Elminsters Ecologies) are the intelligent wombats (the best idea since intelligent, slave driving tapirs)in Ring of Winter. Unfortunately they have since then been criminally underused in the Realms.



There are definitely other marsupials then the opossum based on the wording in Elminster's Ecologies

quote:
There has been a great deal of trapping of hill
animals in recent years, and a particular demand for
marsupials such as the opossum. It has become popular
for people to sport purses made from the
pouches of marsupials and other soft furry creatures.


They say marsupials, meaning more then one kind, and just list the opossum as one example of said marsupials.



Just wondering, WHICH of Elminster's Ecologies is this from, just so that we might know which area sports these marsupials?
Markustay Posted - 03 Aug 2013 : 13:48:45
Absolutely HATED those Wombats.
BadCatMan Posted - 03 Aug 2013 : 05:05:00
Byrt and Lugg were a fun but very strange addition to The Ring of Winter. Oddly, they seemed rather British. There's a little bit about the wombat island (off the coast of Orlil in Lantan) and their community. Platypuses are also mentioned, though they're monotremes rather than marsupials. The wombat island would be a great place to adventure, I think. :)

I had a PC meet a talking wombat in a wild tale, though the rest of the party put this down to the strange mushrooms she'd foraged and eaten. ;)

I need to read Lady of Poison, though I have skimmed it and heard about it. Gunggari mentions the "Alcheringa" or "Altjeringa", directly lifted from Aboriginal terms for the Dreamtime. The 'tattooed solder' thing is unusual, as tattooing generally isn't practised by Australian Aboriginals as a traditional thing. Ritual scarification would be more appropriate. So that bit seems more Maori or Polynesian. (It sounds like he has the Tattooed Monk prestige class.)

Of course, that whole area ought to be a mix of Aboriginal, Papuan, Maori, and Polynesian influences, but given magic and a land that isn't a total dead wasteland for them to develop and diversify, building farms, towns, castles, realms, and so on for things to be very different but clearly inspired by.
The Sage Posted - 03 Aug 2013 : 03:50:09
I agree with sleyvas on being careful about the assumption with the "Osse as Australia" comparison.

Aside from a few obvious examples in the Lady of Poison novel, I usually don't agree with the many who say that Osse is a direct translation of, or heavily influenced by, Australian Aborigine culture. Gunggari's mannerisms aside [as well as his dizheri], it could be said that the supposed "ways" of the Osse people are very well be associated with many other examples of Polynesian tribal cultures. I always thought the actual name "Osse" was a bit of a joke as a matter of fact...
rjfras Posted - 02 Aug 2013 : 23:40:19
quote:
Originally posted by Jorkens

The only ones I can think of (except for opossums mentioned in Elminsters Ecologies) are the intelligent wombats (the best idea since intelligent, slave driving tapirs)in Ring of Winter. Unfortunately they have since then been criminally underused in the Realms.



There are definitely other marsupials then the opossum based on the wording in Elminster's Ecologies

quote:
There has been a great deal of trapping of hill
animals in recent years, and a particular demand for
marsupials such as the opossum. It has become popular
for people to sport purses made from the
pouches of marsupials and other soft furry creatures.


They say marsupials, meaning more then one kind, and just list the opossum as one example of said marsupials.
Wooly Rupert Posted - 02 Aug 2013 : 21:51:40
quote:
Originally posted by sleyvas

quote:
Originally posted by Wooly Rupert

What about dropbears?



ok, you piqued my interest....what's a dropbear?



Drop bear article on Wikipedia
sleyvas Posted - 02 Aug 2013 : 20:59:55
quote:
Originally posted by Wooly Rupert

What about dropbears?



ok, you piqued my interest....what's a dropbear?
Wooly Rupert Posted - 02 Aug 2013 : 20:05:43
What about dropbears?
Quale Posted - 02 Aug 2013 : 19:23:26
not really marsupials, but kappas in Kara-Tur have pouches

and kodragons from Dragonlance
Jorkens Posted - 02 Aug 2013 : 18:54:36
The only ones I can think of (except for opossums mentioned in Elminsters Ecologies) are the intelligent wombats (the best idea since intelligent, slave driving tapirs)in Ring of Winter. Unfortunately they have since then been criminally underused in the Realms.
sleyvas Posted - 02 Aug 2013 : 18:41:20
oh, and the reason I was thinking about the halflings mounted on dire quolls was that they may serve as an interesting place for them to hide goods, as the average Faerunian might consider the creature an oddly colored dire weasel.

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