Board Thread:Questions and Answers/@comment-71.197.222.62-20140124050705/@comment-73.53.86.238-20140416034916

I propose the theory that mamano would thrive in the same way as their animal counterparts do in a normal ecosystem: with the ones at the bottom of the food chain greatly outnumbering the ones at the top. However, what makes this different is the fact that mamono don't hunt and eat eachother (at least i hope they don't), so some of the laws of nature are kinda ignored when it comes to mamono.

What I forgot to include in the question above: how many children do mamono normally have?

my assumption is that they have the same amount of children as normal humans do, with the same odds. But can the "animal part" of them play any roll in reproduction related numbers?