Domestic Flashlight Dylanus (New Pleistocene)

The domestic flashlight dylanus is descended from genetically engineered domestic dylanus/American common dylanus hybrids that escaped from laboratories. They were made by using the flashlight fish's genes/dna to give a dylanus a pair of light organs on their cheeks. When the flashlight dylanus wants to "shine" to search for potential meals or danger, they open their light organs, if they're done with their light organs for now, they close them up (they close and open their light organs much like the flashlight fish). Their flashlight organs are so attracted by humans that people bred them and their flashlight organs in the domesticated forms comes in many different varieties, red, red orange, orange, yellow orange, yellow, yellow green, green, blue green, indigo, violet, white, and gray. Unlike their ancestors, they can no longer breed with natural domestic dylanuses, since they were genetically altered so they could keep their "flashlight" organs. They are omnivores that need fruits, insects, crustaceans, fish, frogs, small reptiles, and smaller mammals to stay healthy. They resemble a hybrid between the American common dylanus and a domestic dylanus, but with a flashlight organs on its cheeks like the ones found on flashlight fishes.