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Sarvi Kettu are a newly discovered species in the Sarmatic mixed forests, near the bottom of Finland around the coast. Sarvi Kettu roughly translates to "Horned Fox Sprites." Nobody is quite sure where Sarvi Kettu evolved from, though their size resembles that of a house cat, their personality like an energetic puppy, their fluffy bodies like a squirrel and their odd horns around their eyes and spine like our documentations of dinosaurs.
Sarvi Kettu generally are mischievous little beans. They like to run around people's feet and bug everyone and steal food right out of hands. They're kind of like pigeons in the way that they flock, but they're perfectly fine on their own as well, though it helps for your Sarvi Kettu to have friends. They're a happy little species and sing in little chirps.
Sarvi Kettu are scavengers when it comes to meat-eating. They prefer to pick up other's scraps, and will only eat meat in small doses. Sarvi Kettu mainly eat fruits off trees, since other animals in that branch of the forest can't climb high enough to get at them. Their nimble little bodies can run up tree trunks to snatch the ripest fruit off the highest branches. If you want to, though, you can feed a Sarvi Kettu human food OCCASIONALLY, but only small doses as a treat. It can make them sick when overfed.
Sarvi Kettu grow to at the most the size of a terrier dog. The average size for a Sarvi Kettu is the size of a normal household cat. When Sarvi Kettu are born, their only the size of a large hamster, including all the fluffiness. Sarvi Kettu grow like weeds and are adults within three weeks. They hit teenage stage at a week, and at that time are the size of the average pet bunny.
Sarvi Kettu can mate when they're at full adult stage, but can have little child relationships when they're at teenage stage. Sarvi Kettu do not mate for life, so you can breed your Sarvi Kettu with a different one each time, even one of your other owned adults. They generally will birth 2-4 pups, but 2 is the most common. They develop the traits of each parent, but will look like their own individual. This will happen mainly in the nursery, but occasionally their will be orphaned pups up for adoption.









