Snatchers are mostly like Sif here: short soft fur, slit pupils, short nub tails and ears, and significantly darker, thin limbs. Despite this statement, snatchers are actually extremely varied and can look very different from one another! Also, baby snatchers are called snups!
Traits
Snatchers may show a large variety of traits, as stated before, since people have bred them for many different purposes. For example, some snatchers have an exceptional sense of smell, bred to be, basically, a living metal detector. Some have much longer, thicker fur that allow them to live in colder temperatures and some don't have any fur at all! Snatchers, usually, are very small creatures, about the size of a rat, but some can even be as big as the average house cat! There are some things that unite snatchers as a species, however: their unique, dark and spindly limbs, and their affinity for stealing and hoarding items, which gave them their name. They also all have special, very stretchy, virtually invisible pouches on their tummies used for carrying their young and trinkets.
Social Structure
Snatchers are quite a social species, living in groups that consist of family units, with little to no hierarchy within them. Snatchers can have litters that consist of up to seven snups, meaning that they tend to need a large space not only for themselves but also little snups that are too young to leave home as well as their hoard.
Diet
Snatchers can eat just about any organic material, although they seem to almost always enjoy eating sour foods the most, though there are individual exceptions.
Mutations
Some snatchers, very rarely, are born with special mutations that are not normally seen. Wings, horns, antlers, fish tails, whatever you could imagine, there's probably a snatcher out there that has it! Because of this, there are snatchers all around the world, even making their homes in ocean caves, in lakes, and in trees.