User:Ala culta: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary Tag: Disambiguation links added |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''''Ala culta''''' is a future species of [[ |
'''''Ala culta''''' is a future species of [[dinosaur]] and is the only known to develop civilization. |
||
==Description== |
==Description== |
||
''Ala culta'' is a |
''Ala culta'' is a moderate [[bird]] in terms of size. Among [[songbirds]], their beaks are considered small, short and straight. They have 10 [[primaries]], 6 [[secondaries]] and 4 [[tertiaries]] on each wing. The species has a very diverse [[genetic pool]], with a great variety of [[plumage]] among billions of its specimens over the planet. |
||
==Ecology== |
==Ecology== |
Revision as of 23:38, 6 August 2023
Ala culta is a future species of dinosaur and is the only known to develop civilization.
Description
Ala culta is a moderate bird in terms of size. Among songbirds, their beaks are considered small, short and straight. They have 10 primaries, 6 secondaries and 4 tertiaries on each wing. The species has a very diverse genetic pool, with a great variety of plumage among billions of its specimens over the planet.
Ecology
Ala culta is an omnivorous species, known to eat plants that include grains, nuts and many types of fruit, alongside animals that include fish, mammals, and other saurians.
Stats
Measurement | Record |
---|---|
Length (Snout to longest caudal feather) | 100 cm |
Length (Snout to pygostyle) | 64 cm |
Width (Between longest primaries) | 100 cm |
Width (Between distal phalanges) | 80 cm |
Height (Ground to head) | 80 cm |
Height (Ground to sacrum) | 40 cm |
Skull (Tip of premaxilla to occipital) | 25 cm |
Mandible (Tip of predentary to angular) | 20 cm |
Humerus | |
Femur |
Ala culta is by far the largest member of Passeriformes ever known, averaging 2.5 kg in mass for an average adult. Many large specimens have reached weights of almost 4 kg in the long history of these birds, leading to a maximum mass estimation of 4 kg.
Taxonomy
Ala culta is the only representative of the family Alaidae, which is believed to be a close relative to the genus Corvus, and inherited the high intelligence alongside the superior ability of tool-making from their common ancestor.