Natural Selection
- The Daidelos Ice Cap is rock solid ice, with an extremely cold ocean surrounding it.
- The seals are adapted to the snow, ice, and the cold temperature.
- They have flippers and a hard, strong stomach.
- They eat fishes, shrimp, ducks, and other small animals in the water.
- They are aggressive around predators and other seals when it comes to competition for food.
- The Daidelos Ice Cap is slowly starting to melt because of the volcanic activity exposing heat.
- Global Warming starts to occur slowly.
- Most of the seals are adapting to the warmer temperatures. Some seals lay out in the sun while others are spending more time in the cold ocean.
- Their predators such as the Polar Bear are slowly migrating away because the Polar Bears are adapted to cold temperature not cool.
- There are more sharks in their area because the water has gotten slightly warmer.
- The Ice Cap has severely melted.
- Some seals are staying in the water for a long period of time, going deeper and deeper where it is cooler. Their offspring are adapting gills since the seals have been staying in the water for a long time.
- Their flippers have advanced making them swim at a rapid pace around the water.
- Others stayed on the remaining glaciers floating around in the ocean, unable to get into the water for a long period of time and instead started to eat the ducks that happen to swim by or resulting to cannibalism.
- The seals that stay in the water for the longest are basically living the ocean, a little deeper than usual with plenty of prey to eat. They can also swim away from predators increasing their chance of survival.
- The Daidelos Ice Cap is now a tundra, the seals that remained on the floating glaciers are slowly adapting to land. They are eating berries and small animals. Predators have increased since they are on land and move slower.