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Flora and Fauna of Payalwa: Difference between revisions

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[[Avoredo]] - The most common tree in the Western Lowlands in Payalwa.
[[Avoredo]] - The most common tree in the Western Lowlands in Payalwa.
|Fauna==== Western Lowlands ===
|Fauna=[[File:Panten Etching.jpg|thumb|Etching of a Panten head]]
Pantens - Large mammals creates with wide hooves that can easily cross marshy peat.
 
=== Western Lowlands ===
Pantens - Large mammals creates with wide hooves that can easily cross marshy peat.


Jacas - Reptilian swamp dwellers.
Jacas - Reptilian swamp dwellers.

Revision as of 18:13, 5 May 2026

Introduction

Payalwa’s landscape supports a distinctive range of flora and fauna adapted to its temperate marshy lowland conditions.

Flora

Western Lowlands

Velharrama - A shrub that is known for it's bright red berries. The berries release a sweet smell and eating them is known to allow the eater to experience a vivid a story. Storytellers thus use the berries to generate new ideas or remember old tales.

Brumerva - A pale marsh fern whose leaves are often used in teas and poultices.

Velhudo - A mash fungus tied to folktales about silent monks wandering the swampy landscape.

Avoredo - The most common tree in the Western Lowlands in Payalwa.

Fauna

Etching of a Panten head

Western Lowlands

Pantens - Large mammals creates with wide hooves that can easily cross marshy peat.

Jacas - Reptilian swamp dwellers.

Xiphos

Hesperon

Myriopas