![]() ![]() ![]() Short or no tails have evolved to conserve heat, though long-tailed snokats occur in some places, and they curl their tails around themselves for warmth. Some snokats have long tusks, once used to pierce thick mastadon hide but now neither a help nor hiderance. (These do not often survive in the tundra and are sometimes even abandoned by their mothers.) Snokats seem to vary some in shape and color, evidence to a thriving gene pool despite their reduced range. When it lived in less harsh conditions, the species was probably a darker color, and occasionally a beige colored cub shows up. The snokat is primarily white with mostly cool icy tones to its skin. The snokat hibernates for a large part of the year and can be seen for a brief time in spring, hunting in a pride for as much food as possible before mating and returning to hibernation. During anchient times, the snokat's range probably included much of the North American continent, and probably fed on the large, now extinct, grazing animals including mammoths and prehistoric buffalo species. ![]()
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