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Eco727 — PH: Abelisaurus

Published: 2011-09-28 02:27:00 +0000 UTC; Views: 3173; Favourites: 29; Downloads: 142
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Description Colored by Julio Lacerda [link]

This is for the AWESOME site Paleo Handbook, a forum ya'll should join to see more awesome illustrations and profiles.

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Abelisaurus comahuensis

Order: Saurischia

Family: Abelisauridae

Period / Time: Late Cretaceous, 80 BCE

Meaning: Abel's Lizard of the Comahue Region

Range: Patagonia, Argentina

Diet: An opportunistic carnivore, Abelisaurus comahuensis feasts on carcasses, eggs, small ornithopods, small to medium sauropods, and sauropod young.

Size: At 21-26 feet in length, 6.6 feet tall at the hip, and weighing 1.4 tons

Social Unit: Often found in family groups. However, they live temporarily in solitude when they leave their family to start their own.

Population: Moderately common

Appearance: This neoceratosaurian is recognized by its huge skull, sunken white eyes, ornamented snout, powerful jaws, and boxcutter-like teeth. The ornaments on its head include a series of knob-like horns on its snout, a thick bony ridge over its eyes, and a bright red dewlap on its throat during mating season. Its large head is held by a long and powerful neck, connected to a muscular torso with incredibly tiny and insignificant arms. Its legs are long and powerful yet gracile, showing that this animal was a built runner. Another notable feature of this predator is the scutelike armor covering its body. Sexual dimorphism is highly present in these animals, with females lacking the decorative features of the males, including the knobs and dewlaps. Males are a greyish green with a series of dark stripes running down from its neck to its tail. In mating season, their faces flush reddish with blood. Females are a darker version of this green, with their stripes ranging from an azure blue to a chocolate brown. Battle scars from interspecies rivalry often appear on the heads of males.

Behavior: The Abelisaurus comahuensis is a pursuit predator, known for recklessly chasing down its quarry, then finishing it with a fatal blow to a soft area, usually the throat. Hunting techniques vary with age, as their size and social unit plays a large role in how they prey. In mated pairs, these abelisaurs would chase and harry large quarry such as small to medium sauropods, biting them until they exhaust from blood loss and collapse. Then one of the theropods would climb onto its back to keep it down while the other chokes it to death with a bite to the throat. In family groups, the technique is almost the same, except the process is quicker because the young are constantly dogging the sauropods during the hunt, nipping at their legs and ankles. Like other abelisaurids, Abelisaurus comahuensis has been known to resort to cannibalism. When these theropods leave their families to live on their own, they are at the great risk of being attacked and eaten by older members of the same species. This is because males are outgoingly territorial when it comes to other males. Sibling rivalry or even just plain food competition are also reasons for this species' cannibalism.

Breeding: As the wet season begins, loud, throaty vocalizations are heard throughout the rainforests. These calls are the mating calls for females suggesting that they are ready to mate. Females also release a strong scent which attracts several males to the area. As many as 7 males have been seen trailing behind ovulating females. The eager males attempt to impress the female by bobbing their heads, flushing their facial colors, displaying their dewlaps, and emitting low cooing sounds. Then the female judges which one she is most impressed by. If she is equally impressed by a number of males, the males will squabble amongst themselves for the female. The squabbling starts as simple growling and display of ornamentation, which is usually enough to drive off the other competitor(s). However, sometimes the contests can escalate in the form of headbutting and even biting. Death from these fights are not unheard of, but are highly circumstantial.

Nesting: When a successful male mates with the female, he does not abandon her. Instead, the two form a mated pair, hunting and sleeping together. When the female lays her eggs, usually about 8 to 10, the male hunts solitarily and brings back food for his mate, who tends the nest and later the hatchlings. Sometimes the amount of food the male provides for the female is too meager, and the female ends up eating some of her own eggs or hatchlings. Interestingly, the nesting of Abelisaurus comahuensis corresponds with the nesting of the local sauropods. This is to ensure that their young will have a steady supply of food when they grow up. They lay their eggs a considerable amount of time before the sauropods lay theirs so that their offspring will be at a hunting size while the sauropods are still small. When the young are large enough to hunt, they accompany the adults on their ornithopod or sauropod attacks. Eventually, when the young are large and experienced enough to hunt on their own, usually about age 4 at a length of 6-10 feet, they leave their parents and their nest to live solitarily until they are old enough to mate, which is when they are 8. This is a dangerous time for them, as other carnivores are willing to eat them. After this they mate and keep the cycle going. Mated pairs only rear children once, and after which they hunt for a few more years, until they die at a healthy age of 15.

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Comments: 4

PaleoJoe [2012-03-27 02:35:16 +0000 UTC]

Very nice color.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

PaleoJoe In reply to PaleoJoe [2012-03-27 02:37:35 +0000 UTC]

Also nice juxtaposition.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

DinoKing22 [2011-09-28 04:17:48 +0000 UTC]

wow, it seams you get more detailed each time, the texture in here is just amazing and the story is good too.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Eco727 In reply to DinoKing22 [2011-09-28 21:25:47 +0000 UTC]

Thanks!!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0