Pachysaurolophus Tumangi
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Pachysaurolophus Tumangi
Height: 10 feet
Length: 26 feet
Weight: 3 tons
Coloration: Males are a bold yellow, with dark green markings on their backs and stomachs. Their crests are a bright red, marked with streaks of black and blue, which are flushed with blood during the breeding season. Females are a lighter yellow, with light green markings. Crests are smaller and have lighter colors. Babies are a mix of brown and yellow, with very small crests.
Diet: Plants, from shrubs to conifers.
Description: Pachysaurolophus are herbivores, which, like the Parasaurolophus, are sociable animals, traveling either in mass herds or near larger animals like Brachysaurolophus. They eat plants, but their beaks, which are tipped with a sharp point, can be used as defense to dig into the sides of foes, cutting into the flesh and scraping bone. During the mating season, males tend to gather in large groups and slam into each other, slamming their crest around their heads until the other is tired out. This can be dangerous, as excessive force can crack or even break their crests, which, although are made of four inches of solid bone, are somewhat fragile in parts.
Territory: Game Trail, sometimes they wander towards the Western Coast.
Length: 26 feet
Weight: 3 tons
Coloration: Males are a bold yellow, with dark green markings on their backs and stomachs. Their crests are a bright red, marked with streaks of black and blue, which are flushed with blood during the breeding season. Females are a lighter yellow, with light green markings. Crests are smaller and have lighter colors. Babies are a mix of brown and yellow, with very small crests.
Diet: Plants, from shrubs to conifers.
Description: Pachysaurolophus are herbivores, which, like the Parasaurolophus, are sociable animals, traveling either in mass herds or near larger animals like Brachysaurolophus. They eat plants, but their beaks, which are tipped with a sharp point, can be used as defense to dig into the sides of foes, cutting into the flesh and scraping bone. During the mating season, males tend to gather in large groups and slam into each other, slamming their crest around their heads until the other is tired out. This can be dangerous, as excessive force can crack or even break their crests, which, although are made of four inches of solid bone, are somewhat fragile in parts.
Territory: Game Trail, sometimes they wander towards the Western Coast.
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