Imumoslontus enjambre
Oslontus disrentius is most famous for being one of the most simple muscals of Oefsy. Oslontus enjambre may take this a step further. Due to life in the bottom of the muddy banks of Zone 23, Oslontus enjambre is beginning to depend less on its vision and more on touch and smell for navigation. It uses densely set chemoreceptors through its skin to navigate and to find its main food sources, Taxonomum bonsanicus and Taxonomum longiceedus. Where those polyphs are, these can be found in large swarms feasting on them by twisting their bodies to loosen vegetation and then swallowing pieces whole with their circular mouths.Oslontus enjambre has lost the set of cones that allow it to see red as they were not needed, but has developed more rods in its eyes which give it improved contrast vision in murkier settings. The eyes of Oslontus enjambre are slit like those of its ancestor but are comparably smaller to the ratio of the body..
Oslontus enjambre has a rather genetically diverse genome, and can grow anywhere from four centimeters (4 cm) to eight centimeters (8 cm) in length depending on the combination of genes it recieves. Larger individuals survive more in years without as many predators as they can outcompete the smaller ones, but small individuals will survive more often in years with more predators as they are not as easy to target..
Oslontus enjambre will sexually reproduce in large "orgies" with males and females mating with eachother hidden within the mosses at the lake bottom once a month. Females have unique wombs to store unfertilized eggs before releasing them while mating, which are extended to around 80% of their torso length on each side, which is rather long to hold the eggs with ease and to have the most surviving offspring, and each female can lay from one-hundred (100) to two-hundred (200) eggs during external fertilization depending on how large she is and how well she is prospering at the time. Oslontus enjambre will mature within a week (1) or two (2) of growth but they are highly predated on by Cynopsis pyrrhosynopsm, so many eggs are laid to ensure some offspring will survive to pass on their genes. Their maximum lifespan is no longer than six months but they will usually die before that due to the high rate of predation and the lack of defenses other than quick reproduction.