Gobbler
Anatomy
One of the biggest yet slowest fish in Lake Kay and its surrounding calderas and lakes, gobblers are a purplish colour with some orange accents. They have an overall round appearance, with incredibly large mouths (hence the name). A pair of horizontally slit eyes sit on the tops of their heads, which give them view of the lakes above as they swim close to the lakebeds. They have small, rounded dorsal fins, a large rounded caudal fin, a pair of small pectoral fins and a tiny anal fin. The colour of the gobbler depends on the quality of the water, with darker purple gobblers living in worse quality water and lighter purple gobblers living in better quality water.Reproduction
Gobblers are not picky when it comes to finding mates. Usually it takes them about five minutes to find a suitable partner, and that is mostly because they cannot tell the difference between males and females, even when it is obvious to us. Gobblers don't stay with their mates either, in fact they find several new mates every year. Because of how fast gobblers reproduce, their offspring fill the rivers to the brim and during hatching season predator populations skyrocket.
Male gobblers are very aggressive towards babies that are not of their own. They have been known to attack and eat babies that aren't theirs, and it usually a very bloody ordeal. To combat this, females will mate with as many males as possible, so when the babies hatch the males will not know if it their baby, and won't attack them. Surprisingly this method works, and male gobbler attacks on babies are fairly uncommon.
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