Ochre Eurypterid
Two large pincers grasp at the air before this sleek creature, while a finned tail bristling with a long, thin stinger rises from behind.
Ochre Eurypterid (CR 1/3)
Small Vermin (Aquatic)Alignment: Neutral
Initiative: +5
Senses: Low-Light Vision, Tremorsense 30 feet; Perception +1
Speed: 20 feet, Swim 40 feet
Space: 5 feet
Defense
Armor Class: 14, touch 12, flat-footed 13 (+1 Dex, +2 natural, +1 size)Hit Points: 4 (1d8)
Saving Throws: Fort +2, Ref +1, Will +1
Immunity: mind-affecting effects
Offense
Melee: 2 claws +0 (1d2-1), sting +0 (1d2-1 plus poison)Reach: 5 feet (10 feet with sting)
Statistics
Str | Dex | Con | Int | Wis | Cha |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
8 (-1) | 13 (+1) | 10 (+0) | - | 13 (+1) | 2 (-4) |
CMB -2
CMD 9
Feats: Improved Initiative
Skills: Swim +9 (uses Dexterity on Climb and Swim checks)
Languages:
Special Qualities: Amphibious
Special Abilities
Poison (Ex)
- Delivery: Sting-injury
- Fortitude Save: 10
- Frequency: 1/round for 4 rounds
- Track: Mild Dexterity
- Saves: 1 save
Ecology
Environment: Warm OceanOrganization: solitary, pair, or swarm (3-12)
Treasure: none
Known to some as sea scorpions, eurypterids are aquatic crustaceans that blur the line between their terrestrial cousins and lobsters. Primeval and voracious, these vermin range in size from relatively harmless ochre eurypterids the size of a dog up to the truly immense spitting eurypterids. There are even rumors of yet larger beasts, called whaleeating eurypterids by sailors. Regardless of their size, all share one thing in common-an aggressive attitude.
Eurypterids lash out at anything that might be food, and once they've tasted prey, are single-minded in their pursuit. Although quite at home in the open sea, most eurypterids are capable of scuttling around on land and can exist out of water indefinitely.
Unlike rats, eurypterids don't spread disease or cause much damage to most cargos-traits that have led some captains to experiment with seeding colonies of ochre eurypterids in their holds to keep rodent populations under control. Alas, one can often tell the ships that use this tactic by the unusually high number of crewmen with missing fingers.
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