The comic at my site, and at deviantart.
Content warning for that much mentioned (better too much than too little when it comes to warnings, I think) blood and gore in this update, and animal death but we can't see much of the dead animal.
Raptors having a nice dinner, and some more feather development inspecting a few days later.
The released and escaped Jurassic World animals adapting to life in North America (be it northern California or somewhere further, different species will probably have different ideas of how far to wander from where they got dropped) has its complications. There's how these animals themselves will be able to survive to take into consideration, and how their presence will affect humans, and also how they will affect the local ecosystem besides humans, as they're all invasive species with no natural ecosystem to be returned to. Isla Nublar wasn't perfect for them, either, and surely had animals other than just them (and goats) on it.
Will the herbivores find plants they're equipped to digest, and what local fauna are they in competition with for those plants now? And what are our big and small carnivores eating? Other JW animals, humans, local animals? That last one is not without problems if something they pick as a new staple dish is an actual endangered species, or perhaps usually prey for an endangered predator species. And of course, it could be local animals kept by humans instead of animals in the wild. Rexy stopping at a zoo may be a bit of an outlier, but places inhabited by humans can be a tempting food source even if humans themselves aren't on the menu, and the risks there are probably less obvious even if the predator knows killing humans tends to get other humans coming after you. The JW animals are used to the presence of humans, after all, so that in itself is not much of a deterrent for at least many of them.
The raptors are smart, for better or for worse. They know to try to stay away from humans, but they're also good at sneaking around human habitations without being detected, so sometimes they might choose to make exceptions. Surely no one will miss that cow.
But hey, at least there's only three raptor mouths to feed. :)
And more plumage ponderings. The JP/W raptor quills don't seem to serve a purpose other than potentially display (maybe they look pretty for potential mates, maybe otherwise communicate things, I've used Indo's a few times for emoting - when he's scared he raises them as if he has enough fluff for that to make him look bigger). They certainly won't work for much thermoregulation, and though the Indoraptor has quills on his arms, they're far from functional wing feathers.
They probably have them as remnants of the animal they're clones of having had feathers, but I wonder about their placement. Out-of-universe, I think the crest on the head might be based on a later-found-inaccurate interpretation of feather impressions in a Microraptor specimen, which seemed to have a feather crest, but turns out the feathers had just gotten messed up and pressed against something after the raptor's death. In-universe, the fictional domaeosaurid known as Velociraptor in that world might very well have had a crest of bigger feathers there. Maybe an instinct to consider a tuft of something featherlike there and in that shape to be pretty is a thing for the clones, passed down from their fully feathered ancestors, whose crests could have been for exactly that purpose. Down the spine is also one of the tracts along which baby birds begin to grow their feathers, so the quills' placement could also just be because they never developed past early stages. Maybe it's a bit of both.
It's unclear how much the JP/W raptors' quills are a sexually dimorphic trait. In the JP3 Velociraptors, only males have quills, and Indo being male fits the pattern. On the other hand, we don't know what a female Indoraptor of his version would look like - they might not look any different, or if they would maybe they wouldn't have quills, or they might have a different amount of them or placed differently, or maybe their quills just wouldn't have the horizontal stripes that his and the JP3 male raptors' do. The Indominus rex has what look like quills, too, but hers are missing stripes. But she and the Indoraptor aren't exactly typical examples of anything, so who knows.
Skye is growing a fancy feather tuft of her own in a bit different shape, based on how Blue has those bumps that might also be remnants of feathers all over the back of her head instead of in a lengthwise line. The JP3 raptors, female and male ones alike, have them too. Maybe the animals JP/W Velociraptors are clones of had a fluffy back of the head, and the males had a crest of longer feathers in a lengthwise line in addition.
A lot of Skye's face feathers are growing between scales, so the transition from feathers to scaly snout is gradual. The little tassel beard is just because.
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