Je pense être tombé sur une image provenant de ce documentaire en rédigeant l'article, je vais essayer de la retrouver.

Edit :
http://www.thefutureiswild.com/index.as ... evel5id=34Citer:
Behaviour
Squibbons spend their entire lives in the trees. Their arms and tentacles are so flexible that they can grip branches and grab food with ease.
They can also weave twigs and leaves into shelters, which they build in the tree-tops. These are used to sleep in at night and to tend to their young.
Squibbons have evolved large brains to cope with their crowded habitat. Navigating through the trees at high speed they use their eyes, placed on the end of long, flexible stalks, to look for danger at every turn.
They are sociable creatures and live in large, organised communities, sharing food and taking care of one another’s babies. They communicate by sound and by colour patterns.
Feeding:
Squibbons feed mostly on plants but are agile enough to snatch forest flish from the air, grabbing their prey with a pair of dextrous tentacles
Mais aussi une autre espèce de grande taille :
Citer:
4m tall, weighing 8 tonnes, with tentacles that extend to 3m and rhino-like skin, the megasquid is a formidable creature. It roams the northern forests of the planet 200 million years hence. All eight of its arms have become legs and look like thick columns, each are a 1/3 of a metre in diameter.
J'ai l'impression que ce documentaire est à peu près aussi scientifique que le livre
Man after man pour ceux qui connaissent.

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Sage à ses heures, idiot le reste du temps.
Horaire inconnu.