Kroque

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Kroque
(Lystrosuchus suchus)
Main image of Kroque
Species is extinct.
22/140, Habitat Loss (Snowball)
Information
CreatorHydromancerx Other
Week/Generation18/122
HabitatFlisch River, Flisch Lakes, Flisch Marsh
Size160 cm Long
Primary MobilitySwimming, Limb- and Tail-Powered, Quadruped, Sprawling Posture
SupportEndoskeleton (Bone)
DietCarnivore (River Shoveltail, River Chut, Snorkelcrest, River Tailhopper, Marsh Chut, Dwarf Snorkelcrest, Riverundi, Kroque babies), Scavenger
RespirationActive (Lungs)
ThermoregulationMesotherm
ReproductionSexual, Lays Hard-Shelled Eggs in Sand, Two Sexes
Taxonomy
Domain
Kingdom
Phylum
Superclass
Clade
Class
Subclass
Order
Suborder
Family
Genus
Species
Eukaryota
Carpozoa
Spondylozoa
Anisoscelida
Pentapodes
Caudapodia
Eucaudapodia
Palapusia
Talpasauriformes
Lystrosuchidae
Lystrosuchus
Lystrosuchus suchus
Ancestor:Descendants:

The kroque split from its ancestor, the river shoveltail. It has gotten larger and thus could eat larger prey. It is an ambush predator and will wait until prey gets close enough and will bite them with its front teeth. Its tail muscles have gotten even stronger while its back legs have gotten weaker and are more ore less useless. Even its front fins have gotten more streamline for faster swimming.

It is mostly aquatic but females will come up to shore and lay their eggs in the sand and bury them. When the babies hatch they race into the water to avoid any creatures that might want to eat them. However adults are not above cannibalizing on the smaller juveniles. They are now more solitary creatures and no longer make communal dams. They only meet to mate or during feeding frenzy when large herd cross the river. The larger they get the bigger the prey they will eat. Thus young kroque will eat things like riverundi and river tailhoppers while the adults will eat creatures like the large river chut and snorkelcrest.

Females are slightly larger than males. They have very poor eyesight and must communicate through touch and vibration during mating. They will use their tail to splash the surface of the water. Since they are deaf they cannot hear the splashes but feel the vibrations on their bodies. Thus they can tell the difference between a struggling creature and a healthy one and will attack the weaker one first.

Living Relatives (click to show/hide)

These are randomly selected, and organized from lowest to highest shared taxon. (This may correspond to similarity more than actual relation)
  • Paddletail (suborder Talpasauriformes)
  • Tree Pinyuk (subclass Eucaudapodia)
  • Mystery Capiri (class Caudapodia)