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After Man: A Zoology of the Future
- 222 statements
- 42 feature instances
- 32 referencing feature instances
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future | page |
AfterManAZoologyOfTheFuture | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future | comment |
A 1981 book written by Scottish geologist Dougal Dixon, which presented his hypothesis on how the fauna and geography of Earth could change 50 million years from now. It set the stage for the popular topic of Speculative Biology.There's also an obscure Japanese cartoon episode and television documentary based on it, which, sadly, was never exported elsewhere. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_144d31b1 | type |
Most Writers Are Human | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_144d31b1 | comment |
Most Writers Are Human: In a sense. While the book doesn't have any actual humans (being set after humans have gone extinct), humans are mammals, and roughly ninety-percent of the species featured are mammals. Birds get some representation, reptiles a little, amphibians just one, while fish and invertebrates only get passing mentions despite making up the vast majority of life on Earth. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_144d31b1 | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_166c3e6f | type |
Speculative Biology | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_166c3e6f | comment |
Speculative Biology: One of the earliest and most famous works in the genre, After Man is dedicated to exploring potential future forms taken by Earth life in order to showcase the ways in which evolution, ecology and natural selection work. | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_166c3e6f | featureApplicability |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_18aff462 | type |
Artistic License – Biology | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_18aff462 | comment |
Artistic License – Biology: Batavia is based on the concept that an archipelago formed and bats arrived there ahead of birds for once and evolved into flightless forms. Even if this were to occur, birds are much better adapted to reverting to a flightless existence than bats since they don't stand on their wings, walk on land much better than bats, and only need to lose some wing feathers, hence why birds have become independently flightless dozens of times while it's never known to have happened among bats even once. It would also mean that birds didn't reach Batavia for millions of years (long enough for bats to dominate niches there), which is extremely unlikely, especially considering the existence of seabirds and migratory birds. The nightstalker is shown preying on a rabbuck and the shallot is shown preying on an unspecified rodent. However, it's explicitly stated that bats are the only mammals found on Batavia, so what these mammals are doing there is a mystery. The flower-faced potoo and flooer are a species of bird and bat which have evolved to have faces which mimic flowers to attract pollinating insects. Such a lifestyle is probably unlikely for warm-blooded animals with such high metabolisms such as as birds and bats, since the catch rate is low (hence why only small invertebrates such as spiders and mantises have evolved such a niche in the present day). The matriarch tinamou has a bizarre reproductive system like a deep sea anglerfish, with the males living as parasites on the much larger female's body. It attempts to justify this strange evolution by stating that, like deep sea anglerfish, it has a low population density. However, it lives in a tropical grassland, which are highly productive ecosystems, unlike the deep sea, which the explanation does not address. The striger, a predatory cat specialized to prey upon primates, bizarrely has a primate-like bodyplan with long fingers, opposable thumbs and the ability to swing from trees like a monkey: a feat impossible for carnivorans due to their shoulder structure and lack of a collarbone. More realistically, the striger should resemble the Madagascan fossa: a feline-relative adapted for hunting lemurs in the trees, and has a decidedly more catlike anatomy (though not a true cat). The reedstilt, the animal frequently illustrating this book and all its editions, is a particularly unexplainable example. A flightless, heron/azhdarchid-like mammal that apparently evolved from shrews (suffice to say, anything from ducks to dogs has a better chance at getting to this niche first) with countless neck vertebrae, creating a bird-like flexible neck. Problem is, mammals are famously restricted to just seven neck vertebrae, with the slow-metabolic sloths and manatees being exceptions; any addition of neck vertebrae causes horrific birth defects that inevitably result in death. The pelagornids are giant marine penguins which have fused their legs and tail together into a single paddle-like organ similar to a whale's fluked tail. However, birds have a very stiff and inflexible spine, so this occurring would be extremely unlikely; all known marine birds are either foot or wing-propelled swimmers for this reason (pelagornids are said to be descended from penguins, which are wing-propelled swimmers, so really there's no reason why they couldn't keep being wing-propelled swimmers). | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_22b3deaf | type |
Toothy Bird | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_22b3deaf | comment |
Toothy Bird: Not exactly "toothy", but there's a kingfisher descendant with tooth-like serrations on the beak. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_27a42ebc | type |
Spiritual Successor | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_27a42ebc | comment |
Spiritual Successor: The 2003 TV series (and companion book) The Future Is Wild, produced by Animal Planet. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_29aecb56 | type |
Parasol Parachute | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_29aecb56 | comment |
Parasol Parachute: The parashrew is a small insectivore which disperse as juveniles using a parasol made out of interlocking hair at the end of its tail. Most inevitably die, since it's an uncontrolled flight, but enough apparently survive to make it viable. Once landed, the hairs fall out and they grow into a normal shrew. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_334e48a1 | type |
After the End | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_334e48a1 | comment |
After the End: Mankind is extinct by the story's beginning. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_35fa738 | type |
Fantastic Fauna Counterpart | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_35fa738 | comment |
Fantastic Fauna Counterpart: The book lives and breathes this trope, with so many examples that they have their own page. The text explains these as being examples of convergent evolution. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_3dfdc686 | type |
Time-Passes Montage | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_3dfdc686 | comment |
Time Passes Montage: The illustrations of savannah predators include three similar views of the same dead gigantelope, being fed upon in turn by horranes, raboons and gholes, until nothing is left but bones. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_41a48472 | type |
Bat Out of Hell | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_41a48472 | comment |
Bat Out of Hell: Batavia, a Pacific archipelago that formed after the age of humanity, is inhabited by various strange species of flightless bats. Most of these are simple insectivores or seal-life fish eaters, but the flightless nightstalker is a ferocious predator provided with powerful fangs and claws, and hunts vertebrate prey in packs that fill the Batavian nights with hunting screeches. These are probably the least scientifically plausible of the creatures presented (flightless bats could certainly arise — the New Zealand lesser short-tailed bat does crawl around to hunt — but it'd be unlikely they'd produce forms like the nightstalker). | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_475d592d | type |
You Dirty Rat! | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_475d592d | comment |
You Dirty Rat!: The rats have become the Earth's principal predator group, taking over the place of the carnivorans. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_4a58592a | type |
California Collapse | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_4a58592a | comment |
California Collapse: An elongated island of temperate woodlands is visible off the Pacific coast of North America. This is more justified than typical examples, since the book is set fifty million years in the future and this would be the result of thousands of incremental tectonic shifts gradually splitting it away from the mainland. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_4eaa9b84 | type |
Author Tract | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_4eaa9b84 | comment |
Author Tract: It's indicated that part of the reason humans became extinct is because medical advances result in a buildup of detrimental genes which would normally be weeded out by natural selection; eventually humans as a whole were crippled by this. This was a view Dixon further expressed in an interview with the sci-fi magazine Omni and in his followup, Man After Man. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_4eaa9b84 | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_553cbdc2 | type |
Eyeless Face | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_553cbdc2 | comment |
Eyeless Face: The truteal, purrip bat, and slobber have no eyes, having become entirely reliant on hearing and echolocation. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_61c3ca7b | type |
Panthera Awesome | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_61c3ca7b | comment |
Panthera Awesome: The striger, the last of the felines, and the first predator in Earth's history to develop adaptations specifically for preying on monkeys and apes (or second, if one considers the fossa of Madagascar that is specialized for hunting lemurs in the trees). | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_65e63bc4 | type |
Backup Bluff | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_65e63bc4 | comment |
Backup Bluff: When threatened by birds, the terratail rodent ducks behind a branch, hisses, and sticks its long tail (which resembles a snake) in its predators' faces. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_6ce4c7b0 | type |
Ascended to Carnivorism | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_6ce4c7b0 | comment |
Ascended to Carnivorism: After the carnivorans mostly went extinct, rats filled their former niches to become the dominant predators in most environments. Similarly, the horrane and the raboon are predators descended from monkeys. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_6ce4c7b0 | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_6d4a4c29 | type |
Unspecified Apocalypse | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_6d4a4c29 | comment |
Unspecified Apocalypse: The book doesn't go into detail about how humans went extinct, as the extinction of humanity is mostly just a way of getting anthropogenic climate change and artificial selection out of the way. Whatever happened also wiped out most ungulates, most carnivorans, and all marine mammals. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_6d4a4c29 | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_6d7026fa | type |
Punny Name | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_6d7026fa | comment |
Punny Name: Many animal names are some kind of wordplay, most of them being Portmanteaus (see above). The islands of Batavia are named after the historic capital of the Dutch East Indies, but the name also refers to the fact that it's inhabited by bat-descendants. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_7131e4c9 | type |
Rodents of Unusual Size | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_7131e4c9 | comment |
Rodents of Unusual Size: In the distant future, rodents have adapted to take over several niches once occupied by larger mammals and have become ubiquitous members of the smaller megafauna. Rodents are the dominant predators of the new world, and many species have evolved to possess the sizes and dispositions of wolves, large cats and polar bears. Outside of the predator rats, the desert leaper is a kangaroo-like creature around three meters long and the mud-gulper reaches the size of a hippo. Rodents in South America didn't turn predatory since carnivorans still survived there, but did evolve into larger forms like the tapimus, strick, and wakka. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_7131e4c9 | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_7b21866b | type |
Noun Verber | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_7b21866b | comment |
Noun Verber: Many of the animal names follow this trope, typically being literal descriptors of what kind of animal they are and what they do. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_7b21866b | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_7efe2c19 | type |
Portmanteau | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_7efe2c19 | comment |
Many animal names are some kind of wordplay, most of them being Portmanteaus (see above). | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_7efe2c19 | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_82464731 | type |
Humanity's Wake | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_82464731 | comment |
Humanity's Wake: Humanity dies out for unspecified reasons after causing the extinction of most megafauna, down to canines and all but one feline. After fifty million years of evolution, the empty niches are filled by the descendants of either smaller animals like rabbits, rats, and mongooses, or by those of domesticated but adaptable animals such as pigs and goats. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_82464731 | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_94f4832c | type |
Bizarre Sexual Dimorphism | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_94f4832c | comment |
Bizarre Sexual Dimorphism: The female matriarch tinamou is similar to an adult turkey, while the male lives as a wren-like symbiont that rides around on her back. The male bardelot looks and hunts like a polar bear, while the female has saber teeth and hunts elephant-sized megafauna. The female common pine chuck resembles living songbirds, while male has a massive beak for crushing seeds and nuts. The male pitta is about three times the size of the female. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_94f4832c | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_a1588c2a | type |
Living Ship | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_a1588c2a | comment |
Living Ship: In a land-going variant, one of the antelope species has a double-ridged back lined with long fur. Insect-eating birds nest in the groove between the ridges, giving their young a free ride along with the antelope herds, while the antelope gets a reliable tick-removal service and is warned of predators by the birds' alarm-calls. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_a1588c2a | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_a51467fe | type |
Chest Monster | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_a51467fe | comment |
Chest Monster: The oakleaf toad lures in prey with its worm-like tongue, while both a bird and a bat mimic flowers to attract insects. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_a51467fe | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_ac781948 | type |
Cartoon Creature | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_ac781948 | comment |
Cartoon Creature: Classification of many of the animals depicted is very loose; sometimes they're only obvious as "mammal" or "bird", without any stricter definition given. For example, the creature on the cover, the reedstilt, is merely said to descend from an "insectivore". Insectivora was a group that encompassed about five-hundred different species (which, thanks to Science Marches On, turned to not be closely related in many cases). Some of the marsupials also suffer from it, as there are equivalents to placental sloths, pigs, and monkeys, but it's never mentioned what they evolved from. An illustration in the epilogue depicts a creature that vaguely resembles a squat moa-like biped except with a mouth filled with sharp teeth rather than a beak. What it's supposed to be is never specified, but apparently, despite its sharp teeth, it's supposed to be an herbivore. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_ac781948 | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_b1033d4a | type |
Maniac Monkeys | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_b1033d4a | comment |
Maniac Monkeys: The cheetah-like horrane and the theropod-like raboons. While not true predators, the khiffah sometimes leads a foe into a trap, and then eats it. The swimming monkey is a hunter, albeit of fish rather than mammals. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_b1033d4a | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_b42e16fb | type |
Feathered Fiend | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_b42e16fb | comment |
Feathered Fiend: There are several predatory birds, only one of which seems to be related to any modern birds of prey. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_b42e16fb | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_b47f7b7f | type |
T. Rexpy | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_b47f7b7f | comment |
T. Rexpy: The raboon is an unusual mammalian variant of this trope, being a baboon that evolved into a Tyrannosaurus-like carnivore walking on two legs, with short arms, a thick tail and massive fangs. The largest raboon species is primarily a scavenger that chases away smaller, weaker predators from their kill, which is a now-debunked theory about how Tyrannosaurus foraged that was gaining popularity at the time After Man was originally being published. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_b47f7b7f | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_c36a80d8 | type |
Armless Biped | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_c36a80d8 | comment |
Armless Biped: The wakka and the fin lizard lack forelimbs as a result of having become extremely specialized for running lifestyles where front limbs are of little use, and rely on their long necks and tails for balance instead. | |
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After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_c36a80d8 | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_c75df49a | type |
Shout-Out | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_c75df49a | comment |
Shout-Out: The oakleaf toad comes from the genus Grima and has a tongue that looks like an earthworm. This is almost certainly a reference to Grima Wormtongue from The Lord of the Rings The ghole might well have been named in reference to H. P. Lovecraft's ghouls and dholes, all three being bone-gnawers. French peeople may look at the yellow-and-black, arboreal, and long-tailed Striger and think its some weird attempt at a realistic Marsupilami. | |
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The Symbiote | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_c7a56f9e | comment |
The Symbiote: The trovamp, a small blood-sucking mammal. | |
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Snowy Sabertooths | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_cb9d4c1b | comment |
Snowy Sabertooths: The apex predator of the arctic is the sexually-dimorphic bardelot. While the male is polar bear-like in appearance and behavior, the female has saber teeth that she uses to hunt woolly gigantelopes. | |
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Call a Smeerp a "Rabbit" | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_d5a84e45 | comment |
Call a Smeerp a "Rabbit": Using taxonomic orders developed by pre-20th century humans to describe animals from 50 million years after man's extinction results in something like this. For example, the wakka (ratite-like bipedal grazer), desert leaper (resembles a dromedary but with kangaroo-like hopping motion), and bardelot (a polar bear analogue with sabretoothed females) are all classed as rodents even though they're very different from each other and don't always have what we identify as rodent features. | |
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A Head at Each End | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_dc7d7fab | comment |
A Head at Each End: The terratail is a subversion: it has markings on its tail that make it resemble a venomous snake, allowing this small rodent to perform a Backup Bluff, complete with a realistic hiss, when threatened by predatory birds. | |
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Bizarre Alien Limbs | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_e1226e2c | comment |
Bizarre Alien Limbs: The nightstalkers walk on their forelimbs, using their hind legs to subdue prey. | |
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Art Evolution | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_e43c66bd | comment |
Art Evolution: The 2015 reprint completely redid the artwork of the two most well-known species from the book, the reedstilt that featured on the cover of the original edition, and the nightstalker. The reedstilt is now much skinnier than before and the nightstalker has more ostrich-like limbs. | |
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Artistic License – Geography | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_e9f517e1 | comment |
Artistic License – Geography: It's noted in the foreword of the 2015 reprinted edition that the setting ignores changes in climate and floral overturn which surely would have occurred in fifty million years, supposedly so it would not alienate general readers with an environment that was too unfamiliar. Instead, the plant life and climate is exactly as it is in the present day despite the drastic shifting of continents and differences in animal life. | |
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Walk on Water | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_f69d396a | comment |
Walk on Water: The mosquito larva-eating pfrit, a mammal so lightweight it can scamper across ponds like an insect. | |
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Shown Their Work | |
After Man: A Zoology of the Future / int_ffad4e9f | comment |
Shown Their Work: Some of the ideas in the book are not actually as absurd as they seem: The common pine chuck has insectivore females and seed-eating males. The idea of male and female birds evolving different diets is not unheard of: the now extinct huia bird of New Zealand had males with short crow-like beaks used to eat seeds and insects, while the female had a thin, curved beak to probe for nectar or wood-boring grubs. While unlikely to evolve into forms like the horrane and raboon, monkeys and apes do hunt large prey on occasion and have a significant amount of meat in their diet, particularly chimps which are known to hunt and eat smaller species of monkeys. | |
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