The Fifth Scene
It is late summer. The big backwash is now a mud hole, and the bed of the
stream entering and leaving the backwash is completely dry; its pebbles are
covered with ghosts-gray, dried algae. The rolling country is seared as far as
the eye can see. The only relief in this hot land is the shade of dull-green
scattered oaks. Long ago the vegetation that grew along the steam was eaten away
by many kids of animals.
You are to supply the animals and the events for this scene. The kinds of
animals included will, of course, determine the action that takes place. The
following questions may help you to select the proper inhabitants for this
drastically changed environment:
Can evidence for the conditions above the found in the data
compiled by Dr. Savage?
Would cannibalism help some animals to survive longer than
others?
Did carrion-eaters have an advantage over other carnivores?
Could rodents survive by eating the underground parts of
plants?
Would gophers or other rodents survive very long if there
were no vegetation to cut? (Gophers and other rodents must continue to wear down
their incisors as rapidly as they grow. Gophers do this in three ways (1) by
cutting vegetation, (2) by carrying lumps of earth in their teeth while digging
tunnels, and (3) by grinding the upper teeth against the lower to keep the
cutting edges sharp. Gophers have four incisors. The yearly growth of each
incisor is about 12 inches.)
If some rodents were at the backwash,
would badgers be there, too
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