hvb wrote:The questions that would need to be answered in the affirmative for a 'cat colony to be likely are, IMHO:
a) Can local soils support Celery with high concentration of the critical trace elements required for full development of their empathic abilities? Failing that can (yuck!) Purple Thorn grow with such concentrations?
Now that the relevant biochemistry (on the plant end, at least) is known, candidates other than those two plants can be manufactured or found.
Also, while I doubt any 'cat colonists would be thrilled by the idea, some of them may accept that some of the things they need will have to be acquired by trade with places that can grow them. Still, that would at least put a site way, way down on the list of attractive places to settle, and they'd need to be secure in their ability to have things to trade with the source - or, by extreme preference,
sources, plural - of the vital product.
I don't have any candidates in mind for a place worth settling while accepting that kind of dependence, and like I said, it'd have to be mighty compelling. I'm just floating the possibility while insisting on its remoteness.
b) How edible/nutritious & delectable are the native prey species candidates to treecats (i.e. compatibility with Sphinxian not a Terran biology)? Failing that can Sphinxian prey-species be translocated? ... there could be subtle differences here, as we know there is between 'cat and human biology.
"Native" in this case may just mean already there, plentiful and thriving. They're settling in on Grayson of all places, where the only things they can eat are grown in orbital farms and brought down - probably already dead - or under the new domes, with thoroughly cleaned soil, entirely new, non-native plants, and entirely new, non-native animals eating the plants. So their entire presence on Grayson depends on the environments and/or resources the two-legs make available - there's no natural environment there they could survive.
It suggests to me that treecats colonizing other worlds may be willing to accept extreme changes in their lifestyle and relationship with humans, at least a large portion of them. They're not all - maybe not
any - looking to recreate their traditional lives on Sphinx in other places.
c) Similarly, will picket wood (or should I write net-wood?) grow in the local soils? Failing that are the local tree-equivalents (or imported trees) of a sort that forms the interconnected branch-ways the 'cats are adapted for?
That would be nice, but they may also be willing to jump more, scamper along the ground more (especially if there aren't large predators around), and/or build bridges from tree to tree - and that's not even counting treecat colonists willing to live very differently than they did on Sphinx.
d) Are the geo-(rather astro-)political indicators of the candidate world in the view of their two-legs advisers positive (or at least neutral)? Will the locals be accepting of a colony of sufficient size (likely clan at a minimum)?
Given that their first colonies have been on Grayson and Gryphon, I think this one weighs heavily on them, much more than having an environment that lets them live like they do at home. Getting to any other world is going to take two-leg help. If living there does too, well, the treecat colonists may figure that's a price they're practically committed to paying anyway, so the important thing is going where they'll have two-leg friends willing to have them and to accept treecat labor and skills for the products of two-leg skills.