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...
UKUNGU WILDLIFE ...
The wildlife of the Ukungu region is typical of the sub-equatorial
jungle and its waterways. The following lists all jungle creatures
and flora and offers the book passage(s) that describes them.
Further details and descriptions can be found in the World of
Gor reference guide's planet
section.
Birds
Finch
...In the second level, that of the canopies,
is found an incredible variety of birds, warblers, finches, mindars,
the crested lit and the common lit, the fruit tindel, the yellow
gim, tanagers, some varieties of parrot, and many more....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
...In the
ground zone, and on the ground itself, are certain birds, some
flighted, like the hook-billed gort, which preys largely on rodents,
such as ground urts, and the insectivorous whistling finch, and
some unflighted, like the grub borer and land gim. Along the river,
of course, many other species of birds may be found, such as jungle
gants, tufted fishers and ring-necked and yellow-legged waders....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Fisher
...His head was surmounted by an elaborate
headdress, formed largely from the long, white, curling feathers
of the Ushindi fisher, a long legged, wading bird....
---Explorers of Gor, 18:236
...Along
the river, of course, many other species of birds may be found,
such as jungle gants, tufted fishers and ring-necked and yellow-legged
waders...
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Fleer
...The canopy, or zone of the canopies,
ranges from about sixty to one hundred and twenty-five feet high,
Gorean measure. The first zone extends from the ground to the
beginning of the canopies above, some sixty feet in height, Gorean
measure. We may perhaps, somewhat loosely, speak of this first
zone as the "floor," or, better, "ground zone,"
of the rain forest. In the level of the emergents there live primarily
birds, in particular parrots, long-billed fleers, and needle-tailed
lits....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Jungle Gant
...In the ground zone, and on the ground
itself, are certain birds, some flighted, like the hook-billed
gort, which preys largely on rodents, such as ground urts, and
the insectivorous whistling finch, and some unflighted, like the
grub borer and land gim. Along the river, of course, many other
species of birds may be found, such as jungle gants, tufted fishers
and ring-necked and yellow-legged waders....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Gim
...In the ground zone, and on the ground
itself, are certain birds, some flighted, like the hook-billed
gort, which preys largely on rodents, such as ground urts, and
the insectivorous whistling finch, and some unflighted, like the
grub borer and land gim. Along the river, of course, many other
species of birds may be found, such as jungle gants, tufted fishers
and ring-necked and yellow-legged waders....."
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
...In
the second level, that of the canopies, is found an incredible
variety of birds, warblers, finches, mindars, the crested lit
and the common lit, the fruit tindel, the yellow gim, tanagers,
some varieties of parrot, and many more....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Gort
...In the ground zone, and on the ground
itself, are certain birds, some flighted, like the hook-billed
gort, which preys largely on rodents, such as ground urts, and
the insectivorous whistling finch, and some unflighted, like the
grub borer and land gim. Along the river, of course, many other
species of birds may be found, such as jungle gants, tufted fishers
and ring-necked and yellow-legged waders....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Grub borer
...In the ground zone, and on the ground
itself, are certain birds, some flighted, like the hook-billed
gort, which preys largely on rodents, such as ground urts, and
the insectivorous whistling finch, and some unflighted, like the
grub borer and land gim....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Gull
"Those are Schendi gulls," said
Ulafi, pointing to birds which circled about the mainmast. "They
nest on land at night."
---Explorers of Gor, 6:99
Jard
Within the next Ahn we passed more than
sixty bodies, dangling at the side of the river. None was that
of Shaba. About some of these bodies there circled scavenging
birds. On the shoulders of some perched small, yellow-winged jards....
---Explorers of Gor, 49:415
Lit
...Behind and about him had swirled a gigantic
cloak of yellow and red feathers, from the crested lit and the
fruit tindel, brightly plumaged birds of the rain forest....
---Explorers of Gor, 18:236
...In the
level of the emergents there live primarily birds, in particular
parrots, long-billed fleers, and needle-tailed lits....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
...In the
second level, that of the canopies, is found an incredible variety
of birds, warblers, finches, mindars, the crested lit and the
common lit, the fruit tindel, the yellow gim, tanagers, some varieties
of parrot, and many more....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Mindar
In the level of the emergents there live
primarily birds, in particular parrots, long-billed fleers, and
needle-tailed lits. Monkeys and tree urts, and snakes and insects,
however, can also be found in this highest level. In the second
level, that of the canopies, is found an incredible variety of
birds, warblers, finches, mindars, the crested lit and the common
lit, the fruit tindel, the yellow gim, tanagers, some varieties
of parrot, and many more....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Parrots
...The canopy, or zone of the canopies,
ranges from about sixty to one hundred and twenty-five feet high,
Gorean measure. The first zone extends from the ground to the
beginning of the canopies above, some sixty feet in height, Gorean
measure. We may perhaps, somewhat loosely, speak of this first
zone as the "floor," or, better, "ground zone,"
of the rain forest. In the level of the emergents there live primarily
birds, in particular parrots, long-billed fleers, and needle-tailed
lits....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Tanagers
...In the second level, that of the canopies,
is found an incredible variety of birds, warblers, finches, mindars,
the crested lit and the common lit, the fruit tindel, the yellow
gim, tanagers, some varieties of parrot, and many more....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Tindel
...Behind and about him had swirled a gigantic
cloak of yellow and red feathers, from the crested lit and the
fruit tindel, brightly plumaged birds of the rain forest...
---Explorers of Gor, 18:236
Umbrella bird
...In the lower portion of the canopies,
too, can be found heavier birds, such as the ivory-billed woodpecker
and the umbrella bird....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Wader
...In the ground zone, and on the ground
itself, are certain birds, some flighted, like the hook-billed
gort, which preys largely on rodents, such as ground urts, and
the insectivorous whistling finch, and some unflighted, like the
grub borer and land gim. Along the river, of course, many other
species of birds may be found, such as jungle gants, tufted fishers
and ring-necked and yellow-legged waders....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Warbler
...Monkeys and tree urts, and snakes and
insects, however, can also be found in this highest level. In
the second level, that of the canopies, is found an incredible
variety of birds, warblers, finches, mindars, the crested lit
and the common lit, the fruit tindel, the yellow gim, tanagers,
some varieties of parrot, and many more....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Woodpecker
...In the lower portion of the canopies,
too, can be found heavier birds, such as the ivory-billed woodpecker
and the umbrella bird....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Animals
Anteater
...More than six varieties of anteater are
also found here, and more than twenty kinds of small, fleet, single-horned
tabuk....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:312
A great
spined anteater, more than twenty feet in length, shuffled about
the edges of the camp.
We saw its long, thin tongue dart in and out of its mouth.
The blond-haired barbarian crept closer to me.
"It is harmless," I said, "unless you cross its
path or disturb it."
It lived on the white ants, or termites, of the vicinity, breaking
apart their high, towering nests of toughened clay, some of them
thirty-five feet in height, with its mighty claws, then darting
its four-foot-long tongue, coated with adhesive saliva, among
the nest's startled occupants, drawing thousands in a matter of
moments into its narrow, tubelike mouth.
---Explorers of Gor, 29:293
Gatch
...On the floor itself are also found several
varieties of animal life, in particular marsupials, such as the
armored gatch, and rodents, such as slees and ground urts. Several
varieties of tarsk, large and small, also inhabit this zone....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:312
Giani
...In the lower branches of the "ground
zone" may be found, also, small animals, such as tarsiers,
nocturnal jit monkeys, black squirrels, four-toed leaf urts, jungle
varts and the prowling, solitary giani, tiny, cat-sized panthers,
not dangerous to man....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:312
Larl
...On the jungle floor, as well, are found
jungle larls and jungle panthers, of diverse kinds, and many smaller
catlike predators. These, on the whole, however, avoid men. They
are less dangerous in the rain forest, generally, than in the
northern latitudes. I do not know why this should be the case.
Perhaps it is because in the rain forest food is usually plentiful
for them, and, thus, there is little temptation for them to transgress
the boundaries of their customary prey categories. They will,
however, upon occasion, particularly if provoked or challenged,
attack with dispatch....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:312
Monkeys
Here, too, may be found snakes and monkeys,
gliding urts, leaf urts, squirrels, climbing, long-tailed porcupines,
lizards, sloths, and the usual varieties of insects, ants, centipedes,
scorpions, beetles and flies, and so on. In the lower portion
of the canopies, too, can be found heavier birds, such as the
ivory-billed woodpecker and the umbrella bird. Guernon monkeys,
too, usually inhabit this level....
... In
the lower branches of the "ground zone" may be found,
also, small animals, such as tarsiers, nocturnal jit monkeys,
black squirrels, four-toed leaf urts, jungle varts and the prowling,
solitary giani, tiny, cat-sized panthers, not dangerous to man....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311-312
Panther
...On the jungle floor, as well, are found
jungle larls and jungle panthers, of diverse kinds, and many smaller
catlike predators. These, on the whole, however, avoid men. They
are less dangerous in the rain forest, generally, than in the
northern latitudes. I do not know why this should be the case.
Perhaps it is because in the rain forest food is usually plentiful
for them, and, thus, there is little temptation for them to transgress
the boundaries of their customary prey categories. They will,
however, upon occasion, particularly if provoked or challenged,
attack with dispatch....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:313
Porcupine
...Here, too, may be found snakes and monkeys,
gliding urts, leaf urts, squirrels, climbing, long-tailed porcupines,
lizards, sloths, and the usual varieties of insects, ants, centipedes,
scorpions, beetles and flies, and so on....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Quala
Small straight bows, of course, not the
powerful long bow, are, on the other hand, reasonably common on
Gor, and these are often used for hunting light game, such as
the brush-maned, three-toed Qualae, the yellow-pelted, single-horned
Tabuk, and runaway slaves.
---Raiders of Gor, 1:4
Slee
In the lower branches of the "ground
zone" may be found, also, small animals, such as tarsiers,
nocturnal jit monkeys, black squirrels, four-toed leaf urts, jungle
varts and the prowling, solitary giani, tiny, cat-sized panthers,
not dangerous to man... On the floor itself are also found several
varieties of animal life, in particular marsupials, such as the
armored gatch, and rodents, such as slees and ground urts.
---Explorers of Gor, 32:313
Sleen
...Conspicuously absent in the rain forests
of the Ua were sleen. This is just as well for the sleen, commonly,
hunts on the first scent it takes upon emerging from its burrow
after dark. Moreover it hunts single-mindedly and tenaciously.
It can be extremely dangerous to men, even more so, I think, than
the Voltai, or northern, larl. I think the sleen, which is widespread
on Gor, is not found, or not frequently found, in the jungles
because of the enormous rains, and the incredible dampness and
humidity. Perhaps the sleen, a burrowing, furred animal, finds
itself uncomfortable in such a habitat. There is, however, a sleenlike
animal, though much smaller, about two feet in length and some
eight to ten pounds in weight, the zeder, which frequents the
Ua and her tributaries. It knifes through the water by day and,
at night, returns to its nest, built from sticks and mud in the
branches of a tree overlooking the water.
---Explorers of Gor, 32:312
Sloth
...Here, too, may be found snakes and monkeys,
gliding urts, leaf urts, squirrels, climbing, long-tailed porcupines,
lizards, sloths, and the usual varieties of insects, ants, centipedes,
scorpions, beetles and flies, and so on....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Squirrels
...Here, too, may be found snakes and monkeys,
gliding urts, leaf urts, squirrels, climbing, long-tailed porcupines,
lizards, sloths, and the usual varieties of insects, ants, centipedes,
scorpions, beetles and flies, and so on....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
...In the
lower branches of the "ground zone" may be found, also,
small animals, such as tarsiers, nocturnal jit monkeys, black
squirrels, four-toed leaf urts, jungle varts and the prowling,
solitary giani, tiny, cat-sized panthers, not dangerous to man....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:312
Tabuk
...On the floor itself are also found several
varieties of animal life, in particular marsupials, such as the
armored gatch, and rodents, such as slees and ground urts. Several
varieties of tarsk, large and small, also inhabit this zone. More
than six varieties of anteater are also found here, and more than
twenty kinds of small, fleet, single-horned tabuk....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:312
Tarsier
...In the lower branches of the "ground
zone" may be found, also, small animals, such as tarsiers,
nocturnal jit monkeys, black squirrels, four-toed leaf urts, jungle
varts and the prowling, solitary giani, tiny, cat-sized panthers,
not dangerous to man....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:3122
Urt
...We may perhaps, somewhat loosely, speak
of this first zone as the "floor," or, better, "ground
zone," of the rain forest. In the level of the emergents
there live primarily birds, in particular parrots, long-billed
fleers, and needle-tailed lits. Monkeys and tree urts, and snakes
and insects, however, can also be found in this highest level....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
...Here,
too, may be found snakes and monkeys, gliding urts, leaf urts,
squirrels, climbing, long-tailed porcupines, lizards, sloths,
and the usual varieties of insects, ants, centipedes, scorpions,
beetles and flies, and so on.
In the
lower portion of the canopies, too, can be found heavier birds,
such as the ivory-billed woodpecker and the umbrella bird. Guernon
monkeys, too, usually inhabit this level. In the ground zone,
and on the ground itself, are certain birds, some flighted, like
the hook-billed gort, which preys largely on rodents, such as
ground urts, and the insectivorous whistling finch, and some unflighted,
like the grub borer and land gim....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
...In the
lower branches of the "ground zone" may be found, also,
small animals, such as tarsiers, nocturnal jit monkeys, black
squirrels, four-toed leaf urts, jungle varts and the prowling,
solitary giani, tiny, cat-sized panthers, not dangerous to man.
On the floor itself are also found several varieties of animal
life, in particular marsupials, such as the armored gatch, and
rodents, such as slees and ground urts....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:312
Vart
..."In the lower branches of the "ground
zone" may be found, also, small animals, such as tarsiers,
nocturnal jit monkeys, black squirrels, four-toed leaf urts, jungle
varts and the prowling, solitary giani, tiny, cat-sized panthers,
not dangerous to man....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:312
Zeder
...There is, however, a sleenlike animal,
though much smaller, about two feet in length and some eight to
ten pounds in weight, the zeder, which frequents the Ua and her
tributaries. It knifes through the water by day and, at night,
returns to its nest, built from sticks and mud in the branches
of a tree overlooking the water.
---Explorers of Gor, 32:312
Mamba
The word 'Mamba' in most of the river dialects
does not refer to a venomous reptile as might be expected, given
its meaning in English, but, interestingly, is applied rather
generally to most types of predatory river tharlarion. The Mamba
people were, so to speak, the Tharlarion people. The Mamba people
ate human flesh. So, too, does the tharlarion. It Is thus, doubtless,
that the people obtained their name.
---Explorers of Gor, 44:393
Water Critters
Bint
Ayari nodded, shuddering. Such blood might
attract the bint, a fanged, carnivorous marsh eel, or the predatory,
voracious blue grunt, a small, fresh-water variety of the much
larger and familiar salt-water grunt of Thassa....
---Explorers of Gor, 24:267
Gint
I was interested in the fauna of the river
and the rain forest. I recalled, sunning themselves on exposed
roots near the river, tiny fish. They were bulbous eyed and about
six inches long, with tiny flipperlike lateral fins. They had
both lungs and gills. Their capacity to leave the water, in certain
small streams, during dry seasons, enables them to seek other
streams, still flowing, or pools. This property also, of course,
makes it possible for them to elude marine predators and, on the
land, to return to the water in case of danger. Normally they
remain quite close to the water. Sometimes they even sun themselves
on the backs of resting or napping tharlarion. Should the tharlarion
submerge the tiny fish often submerges with it, staying close
to it, but away from its jaws. Its proximity to the tharlarion
affords it, interestingly, an effective protection against most
of its natural predators, in particular the black eel, which will
not approach the sinuous reptiles. Similarly the tiny fish can
thrive on the scraps from the ravaging jaws of the feeding tharlarion.
They will even drive one another away from their local tharlarion,
fighting in contests of intraspecific aggression, over the plated
territory of the monster's back. The remora fish and the shark
have what seem to be, in some respects, a similar relationship.
These tiny fish, incidentally, are called gints.
---Explorers of Gor, 29:299-300
The creature
which had surfaced near us, perhaps ten feet in length, and a
thousand pounds in weight, was scaled and had large, bulging eyes.
It had gills, but it, too, gulped air, as it had regarded us.
It was similar to the tiny lung fish I had seen earlier on the
river, those little creatures clinging to the half-submerged roots
of shore trees, and, as often as not, sunning themselves on the
backs of tharlarion, those tiny fish called gints. Its pectoral
fins were large and fleshy.
---Explorers of Gor, 43:384
Grunt
...The blue grunt is particularly dangerous
during the daylight hours preceding its mating periods, when it
schools. Its mating periods are synchronized with the phases of
Gor's major moon, the full moon reflecting on the surface of the
water somehow triggering the mating instinct. During the daylight
hours preceding such a moon, as the restless grunts school, they
will tear anything edible to pieces which crosses their path.
During the hours of mating, however, interestingly, one can move
and swim among them untouched....
---Explorers of Gor, 24:267
Waters
from the lake circulated through the city and fed this moat. In
it, as had been demonstrated, by the hurling of a haunch of tarsk
into the waters, crowded and schooling, were thousands of blue
grunt. This fish, when isolated and swimming free in a river or
lake, is not particularly dangerous. For a few days prior to the
fullness of the major Gorean moon, however, it begins to school.
It then becomes extremely aggressive and ferocious. The haunch
of tarsk hurled into the water of the moat, slung on a rope, had
been devoured in a matter of Ihn....
---Explorers of Gor, 53:432
Marsh Tharlarion
...I screamed. In the pool, clambering over
one another, lifting their jaws upward were crocodiles, beasts
like river tharlarion but differently hided and plated. I nodded.
The marsh tharlarion, and river tharlarion, of Gor are, I suspect,
genetically different from the alligators, caymens and crocodiles
of Earth. I suspect this to be the case because these Earth reptiles
are so well adapted to their environments that they have changed
very little in tens of millions of years. The marsh and river
tharlarion, accordingly, if descended from such beasts, brought
long ago to Gor on Voyages of Acquisition by Priest-Kings, would
presumably resemble them more closely. On the other hand, of course,
I may be mistaken in this matter. It remains my speculation, however,
that the resemblance between these forms of beasts, which are
considerable, particularly in bodily configuration and disposition,
may be accounted for by convergent evolution; this process, alert
to the exigencies of survival, has, I suspect, in the context
of similar environments, similarly shaped these oviparous predators
of two worlds....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:326
River Tharlarion
The word 'Mamba' in most of the river dialects
does not refer to a venomous reptile as might be expected, given
its meaning in English, but, interestingly, is applied rather
generally to most types of predatory river tharlarion. The Mamba
people were, so to speak, the Tharlarion people. The Mamba people
ate human flesh. So, too, does the tharlarion. It Is thus, doubtless,
that the people obtained their name.
---Explorers of Gor, 44:393
Bugs
Ant
...Here, too, may be found snakes and monkeys,
gliding urts, leaf urts, squirrels, climbing, long-tailed porcupines,
lizards, sloths, and the usual varieties of insects, ants, centipedes,
scorpions, beetles and flies, and so on....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Soon, as
we approached more closely, quietly, the sound became much louder.
It was now clearly distinguishable as a quite audible rustling
or stirring. But there was no wind.
"The marchers," said the leader of the small men, pointing.
The hair on the back of my neck rose.
I saw now that the sound was the sound of millions upon millions
of tiny feet, treading upon the leaves and fallen debris of the
jungle floor. Too, there may have been, mixed in that sound, the
almost infinitesimal sound, audible only in its cumulative effect,
of the rubbings and clickings of the joints of tiny limbs and
the shiftings and adjustments of tiny, black, shiny exoskeletons,
those stiff casings of the segments of their tiny bodies.
"Do not go too close," said the leader of the small
men.
The column of the marchers was something like a yard wide. I did
not know how long it might be. It extended ahead through the jungle
and behind through the jungle farther than I could see in either
direction. Such columns can be pasangs in length. It is difficult
to conjecture the numbers that constitute such a march. Conservatively
some dozens of millions might be involved. The column widens only
when food is found; then it may spread as widely as five hundred
feet in width. Do not try to wade through such a flood. The torrent
of hurrying feeders leaves little but bones in its path.
"Let us go toward the head of the column," said the
little man.
We trekked through the jungle for several hours, keeping parallel
to the long column. Once we crossed a small stream. The marchers,
forming living bridges of their own bodies, clinging and scrambling
on one another, crossed it also. They, rustling and black, moved
over fallen trees and about rocks and palms. They seemed tireless
and relentless. Flankers marshaled the column. Through the green
rain forest the column moved, like a governed, endless, whispering
black snake.
"Do they march at night?" I asked.
"Often," said the small man. "One must be careful
where one sleeps."
We had then advanced beyond the head of the column by some four
hundred yards.
"It is going to rain," I said. "Will that stop
them?"
"For a time," he said. "They will scatter and seek
shelter, beneath leaves and twigs, under the debris of the forest,
and then, summoned by their leaders, they will reform and again
take up the march."
Scarcely had he spoken but the skies opened up and, from the midst
of the black, swirling clouds, while lightning cracked and shattered
across the sky and branches lashed back and forth wildly in the
wind, the driven, darkly silver sheets of a tropical rain storm
descended upon us.
"Do they hunt?" I shouted to the small man.
"Not really," he said. "They forage."
... "Look,"
had said the leader of the small men this morning, "scouts."
He had thrown to the forest floor a portion of the slain tarsk.
I watched the black, segmented bodies of some fifteen or twenty
ants, some two hundred yards in advance of the column, approach
the meat. Their antennae were lifted. They had seemed tense, excited.
They were some two inches in length. Their bite, and that of their
fellows, is vicious and extremely painful, but it is not poisonous.
There is no quick death for those who fail to escape the column.
Several of these ants then formed a circle, their heads together,
their antennae, quivering, touching one another. Then, almost
instantly, the circle broke and they rushed back to the column.
"Watch," had said the small man.
To my horror I had then seen the column turn toward the piece
of tarsk flesh.
...There
was now a horrified shouting in the camp. I saw torches being
thrust to the ground. Men were irrationally thrusting at the ground
with spears. Others tore palm leaves from the roofs of huts, striking
about them.
I hoped there were no tethered animals in the camp. Between two
huts I saw a man rolling on the ground in frenzied pain.
I felt a sharp painful bite at my foot. More ants poured over
the palings. Now, near the rear wall and spreading toward the
center of the village, it seemed there was a growing, lengthening,
rustling, living carpet of insects. I slapped my arm and ran toward
the hut in which originally, our party had been housed in this
village. With my foot I broke through the sticks at its back.
--- Explorers of Gor, 47:400-402
Centipede
...Here, too, may be found snakes and monkeys,
gliding urts, leaf urts, squirrels, climbing, long-tailed porcupines,
lizards, sloths, and the usual varieties of insects, ants, centipedes,
scorpions, beetles and flies, and so on....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311
Scorpion
... Here, too, may be found snakes and monkeys,
gliding urts, leaf urts, squirrels, climbing, long-tailed porcupines,
lizards, sloths, and the usual varieties of insects, ants, centipedes,
scorpions, beetles and flies, and so on....
Spider
... Also in the ground zone are varieties
of snake, such as the ost and hith, and numerous species of insects.
The rock spider has been mentioned, and termites, also....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311-312
Termite
...Also in the ground zone are varieties
of snake, such as the ost and hith, and numerous species of insects.
The rock spider has been mentioned, and termites, also. Termites,
incidentally, are extremely important to the ecology of the forest.
In their feeding they break down and destroy the branches and
trunks of fallen trees. The termite "dust," thereafter,
by the action of bacteria, is reduced to humus, and the humus
to nitrogen and mineral materials....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:311-312
Flora
Carpet Plant
I then rose to my feet and walked a few
yards away, to a fan palm. From the base of one of its broad leaves
I gathered a double handful of fresh water. I retuned to the girl
and, carefully, washed out the wound. She winced. I then cut some
leaves and wrapped them about it. I tied shut some leaves and
wrapped them about it. I tied shut this simple bandage with the
tendrils of a carpet plant.
---Explorers of Gor, 34:347
Liana Vine
...Another useful source of water is the
liana vine. One makes the first cut high, over one's head, to
keep the water from being withdrawn by contraction and surface
adhesion up the vine. The second cut, made a foot or so from the
ground, gives a vine tube which, drained, yields in the neighborhood
of a liter of water....
---Explorers of Gor, 32:310
Palm Tree
There is an incredible variety of trees
in the rain forest, how many I cannot conjecture. There are, however,
more than fifteen hundred varieties and types of palm alone. Some
of these palms have leaves which are twenty feet in length. One
type of palm, the fan palm, more than twenty feet high, which
spreads its leaves in the form of an opened fan, is an excellent
source of pure water, as much as a liter of such water being found,
almost as though cupped, at the base of each leaf's stem.
---Explorers of Gor, 32:310
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