In a universe I am creating, there are many living species of humans (mammals from the Homo genus) (for example, there are ogres, giants, merfolk, halflings, dwarfs, and goblins). One of them is called gnomes (their scientific name is Homo minimus) (that means "tiny human"). Their basic characteristics include:
- Adults are as small as a domestic cat;
- They are as social as meerkats;
- They have an improved sense of smell, and an improved sense of eyesight, but a worse sense of hearing;
- They are omnivores with herbivorous tendencies like gorillas;
- They have a higher risk of osteoporosis, and senile dementia, and a lower risk of type 2 diabetes, noninfectious cancer, and noninfectious cardiovascular disease;
- Males are larger than females (mandrill-like sexual dimorphism);
- They are MUCH more likely to be rhesus negative than anatomically modern humans (62 % of gnomes are rhesus negative) (I do not mean rhesus null, I mean at least the simple absence of D antigen), and they are also more likely than anatomically modern humans to have blood type O (70 % of gnomes are blood type O, 14 % are type A, 14 % are type B, and 2 % are type AB) (to be exact, 45.6 % of gnomes are O rhesus negative, 7.3 % are A rhesus negative, 7.3 % are B rhesus negative, 1.8 % are AB rhesus negative, 24.4 % are O rhesus positive, 6.7 % are A rhesus positive, 6.7 % are B rhesus positive and 0.2 % are AB rhesus positive);
- They have an average lifespan of 9.5 decades (95 years old), the world record is 14 decades (140 years old);
- They are more fertile than anatomically modern humans (the twin birth rate for gnomes is 13 to 22 twin sets per 1,000 births) (the twin birth rate for anatomically modern humans is 9 to 16 twin sets per 1,000 births);
- They can interbreed with anatomically modern humans, but it rarely happens, because if a female gnome reproduces with a male anatomically modern human, giving birth can be a nightmare EVEN by human standards (this is comparable to a puppy that has a Scottish terrier as a mother, and an Irish wolfhound as a father) (nevertheless, the resulting offspring between a gnome and an anatomically modern human is often fertile, except that female hybrids are more likely to get PCOS, and male hybrids are more likely to get oligospermia).