About: Dwarf Wounder   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The Dwarf Wounder is one of the last dinosaur species, evolving from Troodons that survived the mesozoic/cenozoic extinction and remained unchanged, other than it shrank to about the size of a chicken. It feeds on small mammals, small birds, small reptiles, frogs, fish, insects, berries, and leaves. It lives in grasslands and woodlands of Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, South Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Georgia, Alabama, and Kansas, but were introduced to Nevada, Arizona, Oregon, and California by humans. Like all troodon descendants in the genus Troodon, they can tolerate well with human activities and can survive in all kinds of human settlements.

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  • Dwarf Wounder
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  • The Dwarf Wounder is one of the last dinosaur species, evolving from Troodons that survived the mesozoic/cenozoic extinction and remained unchanged, other than it shrank to about the size of a chicken. It feeds on small mammals, small birds, small reptiles, frogs, fish, insects, berries, and leaves. It lives in grasslands and woodlands of Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, South Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Georgia, Alabama, and Kansas, but were introduced to Nevada, Arizona, Oregon, and California by humans. Like all troodon descendants in the genus Troodon, they can tolerate well with human activities and can survive in all kinds of human settlements.
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abstract
  • The Dwarf Wounder is one of the last dinosaur species, evolving from Troodons that survived the mesozoic/cenozoic extinction and remained unchanged, other than it shrank to about the size of a chicken. It feeds on small mammals, small birds, small reptiles, frogs, fish, insects, berries, and leaves. It lives in grasslands and woodlands of Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, South Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Georgia, Alabama, and Kansas, but were introduced to Nevada, Arizona, Oregon, and California by humans. Like all troodon descendants in the genus Troodon, they can tolerate well with human activities and can survive in all kinds of human settlements.
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