cephron wrote:
Very cool idea! I have a couple questions...
1) If Saraneeks have no predators, what limits their population? Is it competition over food, or perhaps competition over space in the caves?
2) What is the natural function of the color/mist? Do they secrete it to protect themselves from strong sunlight, since their feathers have no pigmentation? Does it play a role in attracting mates? Do both male and female Saraneeks produce colors? The same colors?
3) I'm a little unclear on how the colors dissolve into mist in the middle of a rain. Normally, rain actually clears mist and dust out of the air, as particles are caught in the falling drops. Perhaps the rain simply wets the colors, which then spread as mist after the rain ends? An alternative (simpler in my opinion, but perhaps less glorious than the mist) might be that the color runs off with the rain. In this case, Zeewoks could put Saraneek food on a stick in the middle of a basin, and spread these basins out whenever it rains. A Saraneek would enjoy a meal while the rain washes the dyes into the basin.
1. Competition for space in the caves.
2. When they go out in the rain and the mist comes off, it's like they are cleaning themselves. Kind of like the colors are "waste" to them. Males produce dark colors and females produce light colors.
3. I'm sticking with the mist idea, but thank you.

Well, the particles in rain act like a chemical reaction against the Saraneeks' skin which makes the colors repel the skin. It might not make much sense but that's how I see it in my head...
