Kank
  1. Creatures

Kank

Insectoid

Terrain: Tablelands or Hinterlands

Frequency: Common

# Appearing: 50-500

Kanks are large docile insects. Their bodies have a black chitinous exoskeleton, and are divided into three sections: head, thorax, and abdomen. Kanks often weigh as much as 400 pounds and stand up to four feet tall at the back, with bodies as long as eight feet from head to abdomen. Around their mouths, they have a pair of multi-jointed pincers which they use to carry objects, to feed themselves, and occasionally to fight with. On their thoraxes, they have six lanky legs ending in a single flexible claw with which the kank can grip the surfaces it walks upon. Their bulbous abdomens have no appendages, and are simply carried above the ground. Kanks are often used as caravan mounts, as they can travel for a full day at their top speed, carrying a twohundred pound passenger and two-hundred pounds of cargo. They also make decent herd animals and are especially valued by elves. Because they can digest nearly any sort of organic matter, these hardy beasts will thrive in almost any environment. In addition, they require little attention, for a kank hive instinctively organizes itself into food producers, soldiers, and brood queens. The food producers secrete melon-sized globules of green honey that they store on the their abdomens to feed the young and, when food is scarce, the rest of the hive. Humans and demi-humans can live on this nectar alone for periods of up to three weeks, but must supplement their diets with meat and/or vegetation after longer periods. The sweet taste of this nectar makes it very valuable, and it is this that has caused the kank to be domesticated. It should be noted that wild kanks produce far fewer globules than their carefully breed cousins.

Combat

In a fight, the soldiers attack first, striking with their pincers to try to paralyze the target with its poison. If pressed, the food producers will also fight, but they lack the poison of the soldiers. The brood queen never attacks, even in self defense.

Habitat/Society

When the tribe stops in an area that looks as though there is a considerable amount of vegetation, the brood queens lay a clutch of twenty to fifty eggs. The soldier kanks, along with the rest of the hive, ferociously defend this area from all predators, and will not leave until the eggs hatch. Herders must delay their migrations or abandon their hives when this conflicts with their plans.

Ecology

Although predators may attack kanks for the food producers’ honey globules, only the foulest carrion eaters will eat kank flesh. As soon as a kank dies, its meat emits a foul-smelling odor that not even a starving man can stomach. The chitinous exoskeleton of kanks can be scraped and cut into solid plates of armor, but it is somewhat brittle and each time it is hit there is a chance that it will shatter.

STATS

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