River Camel
With heavy flat feet and webbed toes, the awkward looking River Camel is well-adapted to life in the jungles of Brunivard, wading and swimming in the rivers, using their long necks and closing their nostrils to browse deep-growing plants. Their humps are not filled with fat like a desert camel, but are muscular sacks of air. River camels are able to adjust their buoyancy and dive deep in freshwater lakes to reach deeper food. They can stay under for as long as 15 minutes. Adults are larger than most river predators and can avoid most of the shoreline predators by keeping to the deeper water.
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