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Saguaroi

This humanoid plant creature has the prickly hide of a cactus, and smaller cactuses seemingly sprout from its flesh.

Saguaroi CR 5

Source Bestiary 4 pg. 229
XP 1,600
N Medium plant
Init +8; Senses low-light vision; Perception +10

Defense

AC 18, touch 14, flat-footed 14 (+4 Dex, +4 natural)
hp 59 (7d8+28); regeneration 5 (fire)
Fort +9, Ref +8, Will +4
Defensive Abilities needle hide; Immune plant traits

Offense

Speed 40 ft.
Melee 2 slams +10 (1d6+5)
Special Attacks needle cone

Statistics

Str 20, Dex 18, Con 18, Int 7, Wis 15, Cha 11
Base Atk +5; CMB +10; CMD 24
Feats Alertness, Combat Reflexes, Improved Initiative, Lightning Reflexes
Skills Perception +10, Sense Motive +5, Survival +5
Languages Sylvan
SQ freeze, produce water

Ecology

Environment warm deserts
Organization solitary, pair, party (3–9), or tribe (10–20)
Treasure standard

Special Abilities

Needle Cone (Ex) Three times per day, as a standard action a saguaroi can eject a barrage of needles from its body. This effect creates a 15-foot-cone burst of needles that deals 4d6 points of piercing damage to all creatures in the area (Reflex DC 20 for half). The save DC is Constitution-based.

Needle Hide (Ex) A saguaroi is covered with needles and spines, and its slam attacks deal both bludgeoning and piercing damage. Any creature grappling a saguaroi or attacking it with a natural attack or unarmed strike takes 1d4 points of piercing damage (manufactured weapons with the reach special feature do not endanger the user this way). A creature grappling a saguaroi takes this damage each round of the grapple.

Produce Water (Ex) As a standard action once per hour, a saguaroi can cut itself (taking 1 point of damage) to produce 1 gallon of water. After producing 4 gallons, it becomes fatigued. After producing 8 gallons, it becomes exhausted and cannot produce more water for 24 hours.

Description

Saguarois, also called cactusfolk by desert-dwelling humanoids, make their homes in rocky badlands, hot scrublands on the edge of vast deserts, and sandy dunes baked by the sun. They are generous but territorial, offering aid to travelers who brave the blistering deserts—often in the form of their own watery blood—but don’t tolerate guests who overstay their welcome. Civilization rarely attempts to push far into the deserts, leaving these creatures relatively isolated from other intelligent races. In cases where belligerent settlements threaten the way of life for tribes of saguarois, however, the cactusfolk respond with terrifying violence.

Saguarois live in small nomadic tribes, traveling under the life-giving sun by day and rooting themselves each night in places where they can draw minerals from the pebbly and sandy soil and absorb water. Saguarois produce flowers once a year that go to seed and grow into young saguarois if the adult creatures properly care for them. If planted, a seed must be attended by one or more saguarois over the course of a year before the infant saguaroi sprouts.

After sprouting, it takes 4 years before the infant saguaroi can uproot itself and move about, and decades more to reach maturity. Some saguarois have lived for hundreds of years, and these old cactusfolk often sprout additional limbs or strange twisting growths stretching out from their cylindrical torsos. Usually these additional limbs and growths are nonfunctional, but significantly advanced saguarois have been known to learn how to use them as if they were their primary arms and legs.