Pachyrhinosaurus Canadensis
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Pachyrhinosaurus Canadensis
Height: 6 feet
Length: 23 feet
Weight: 4 tons
Coloration: Males are a bold green, with orange splotches on their backs. Their stomachs are a deep yellow, and their frills are colored in various markings of red, yellow and violet. Females are a green-brown, with smaller markings and lighter frills. Babies are a beige color, with light orange markings and lighter frills.
Diet: Plants, whatever it can get in it's beak.
Description: Unlike their cousins, Pachyrhinosaurus lacks horns on their heads, but instead have a mass of bone and keratin on their snouts. During the rutting season, males charge together, and try to shove the other male to the ground with these masses. Similar to their cousins, Pachyrhinosaurus travel in herds, often as much as thirty individuals. When faced with an opponent, the males tend to try and corner the foe, stomping their feet and swiveling their heads around in a display of aggression, while the females lead the babies to safety. One of the smallest ceratopsian mutants on the island, these creatures are very sociable, and it is a rare sight to see a lone Pachyrhinosaur without others close by.
Territory: Game Trail, or anywhere with good space.
Length: 23 feet
Weight: 4 tons
Coloration: Males are a bold green, with orange splotches on their backs. Their stomachs are a deep yellow, and their frills are colored in various markings of red, yellow and violet. Females are a green-brown, with smaller markings and lighter frills. Babies are a beige color, with light orange markings and lighter frills.
Diet: Plants, whatever it can get in it's beak.
Description: Unlike their cousins, Pachyrhinosaurus lacks horns on their heads, but instead have a mass of bone and keratin on their snouts. During the rutting season, males charge together, and try to shove the other male to the ground with these masses. Similar to their cousins, Pachyrhinosaurus travel in herds, often as much as thirty individuals. When faced with an opponent, the males tend to try and corner the foe, stomping their feet and swiveling their heads around in a display of aggression, while the females lead the babies to safety. One of the smallest ceratopsian mutants on the island, these creatures are very sociable, and it is a rare sight to see a lone Pachyrhinosaur without others close by.
Territory: Game Trail, or anywhere with good space.
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