Therolamna isurodontus

From OurFoodChain
Revision as of 23:08, 30 April 2020 by Ourfoodchain-bot (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{BotGenerated}} {{Infobox_Species |image=File:therolamna_isurodontus.png |Creator=Evolution |Status=Extant |Common Name= |Habitat=1 |Roles=Predator |Genus=Therolamna...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)




species name: Therolamna isurodontus
ancestor: therolamna therophagus
zone/s: 1
size: roughly 5ft or 1.5m in length

Reproduction: they reproduce with internal fertilization and pups develop for a month or two before being born into the pack, this skips over the vulnerable phase in their lifecycle when they are preyed upon by any small muscal that happens upon the eggs like T. pelagicus . females will give birth among the pack as they will all protect the young from a young age
general description:the dramatic increase in size from its ancestor is due to its focus on larger muscals than its ancestor, which require larger body size in order to effectively predate upon them and more efficient tail shape for cruising large distances by creating small vortices behind the animal . they have also evolved a more advanced form of cooperative hunting similar to that of wolves and orcas, chasing prey in semi-large groups of 6-7 in order to take down much larger prey.. groups are not territorial and identify one another using their elongated caudal spine that varies from individual to individual in length, width, and curvature in order to identify who does what in a hunt like younger individuals driving prey toward a larger group. They also have evolved a primitive form of chemoreceptors from touch receptors all over their snout in order to better detect prey from long distances. these evolved when touch receptors began to fire when coming into contact with certain chemicals

diet: their primary diet consists of the large muscals in zone 1 like U. cetorhinus, T. katharagnathus, T. gigantocetus, and ect but will not hesitate to feed on smaller organisms like rotundus, G. aggressor, necrovora, and indespectus