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Creator: Rodrixaurus
Height: 50cm, 2m wingspan
Clade: pterosauria, tapejarimorpha
Habitad: wollemia open woodland
Ecology generalist hervibore
Aditional: On the wollemia open woodlands we can see among the trees a curious species of pterosaur, the akanthohippo iridiscens or the iridescent pegasus, a active and agile generalist hervibore with a very curious spiky mane, similar to a hedgehog, that protects it of predators, also the spikes are presented on the lower part of the neck and elbow.
But the the main reason of the name of these tapejarimorph is his iridescent, that uses to confuse predators, contrary to some my think these iridiscece has form on the scales of the animal instead in his feathers because of various microstructures presented on the scales of tne animal.
As we have mentioned before this species is a generalist herbivore, eating everything from fruits of the bushes to grazing in the open parts of the forest.
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Finally!!!!, my first lemuria submission
Marine cichlids
I) Yellow pokerchlid (Belochrmis poker)
-These species of cichlids are characterized by reaching velocities similar to modern tuna. Living in the epipelagic zone, they are a generalist species that hunts evrything than can fit in their mouth, because of these they have become a very successful organism. Males have gold and brownish tones on the back and white tones on the bottom, and a yellow to blue gradient in all the fins; they can reach up to 20cm. On the other hand, females have a more brownish gray in the back and also white tones on the bottom. Females can reach up to 12cm. We can usually see them swimming in groups of 3-4 individuals, 2-3 females and one male.
II) King piper hound fish (Mekocara rex)
-The king piper hound fish is a species of hound fish that lives near estuaries, but they can also live in zones near the coast. It has a carnivorous diet, eating molluscs, snails, and crabs. These fish have developed one big tooth similar to phuffer fishes that can crush the shells of various invertebrates. They usually live near the bottom, searching for invertebrates, constantly moving the substrate below them. These benefits the river removing wastes and remains of food that, in other way could putrefy and realise toxics to the water, such as nitrates. They can reach 40cm long, also they have greenish tones on the back and white tones on the bottom, they are usually solitary, but we can see males and females protecting their prole, when they turn incredibly territorial and aggressive.
III) Magma tail hound fish (Gibucara Igniae)
-The magma tail hound fish is a marine cichlid specialized on octopuses and other cephalopods that compose the 90% of its diet, the other 10% coresponses to distracted small fishes and other invertebrates. They are territorial and highly aggressive toward other fishes, they have a gradient of red scales to grey in the body an,d red fins, they can reach to 35cm
Some speculative dinos i made, the first one is a protospinosaurid that diverged from the rest of protospinosaurids to become a sauropod hunter, and the other is a large late surviving diplodocid of late cretaceous.
Hope you like them!!!
Lookin sharp

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itchy lizard
Ok, lets have a look at this: Over the last few days a new paper in Science has led to MANY discussions in the paleo community and it appears to have breached containment into the wider world, judging by headlines and google results.
"Earliest octopuses were giant top predators in Cretaceous oceans" by Ikegami et. al describes a new beak of the basal octopus genus Nanaimoteuthis. And yeah, it's a whopper! Just look at the specimen next to a giant squid beak in this figure! They also note that...
...beak shows some intense, asymmetrical wear, indicating a lot of hard objects being processed by this beak. On top of that they assign the genus to the group Cirrata (finned octopuses and relatives) instead of Vampyromorpha as it was in past papers. This is were the hard facts end though.
Don't get me wrong: This must have been a huge animal, but I also think that anything beyond this is purely speculative. The authors give a total length of 7 to 19 meters, an enormous range, with an estimated mantle length of max 4.4 m. They base this on the proportions of finned octopuses and other close relatives but I would argue that is just math for the sake of math. We know VERY little about early octopuses. Their beaks are often the only thing preserved and their diversity in the Cretaceous remains murky.
That's the size part, what I have an actual problem with though is the way they deduce behavior, died and even cognition from this fossil. Based on the size, wear and asymmetry they propose that this animal would compete, maybe even hunt large marine reptiles, in a smart way.
That's plain bullshitting in my eyes. Intense wear on a beak suggests this animal would be durophagous, going after armored or hard shelled prey. cracking the bones of marines reptiles feels very contrived and modern day octopuses (that often eat crabs) don't look much different.
The asymmetry of the beaks is an interesting detail but I would NEVER derive an argument for higher cognition from that. Cognitive abilities are next to impossible to grasp from the fossil record even IF you have the brain. Which leaves the question what was this guy doing?
Short answer is: we don't know. As I hopefully illustrated here we have simply too few data points to make any concrete arguments for this animals appearance or lifestyle. HOWEVER
As people pointed out on Discord: crushing shells in an pelagic habitat is something that was a breeze in the Mesozoic. Ammonites in the cretaceous come in many different shapes but also sizes. 50 cm plus species are not rare.
We also know from the Jurassic there were likely other cephalopods that went after ammonites. So if the ammonites grew in the Cretaceous why shouldn't their predators as well? Beyond ammonites the Late Cretaceous also gave rise to a large to gigantic bivales like many inoceramids
This abundance of durophagous prey is also reflected in the predators, large sharks, mosasaurs and even giant chimeras took advantage of this plentiful food source. I therefore think a large ammonite predator is a much more likely niche for Nanaimoteuthis.
In my interpretation I pair the octopus with the giant ammonite Parapuzosia, these animals aren't known from the same localities but their time ranges overlap which makes it plausible to me that these guys, or close relatives, could have met.
Lastly I want to quickly talk about the promotion and reception of this publication. While I don't completely fault the authors for their writing - after all LOOK AT THE MODERN ACADEMIC CLIMATE - I do think it's troubling that the editor's note, the journal itself, immediately evokes the image of the Kraken, a mythological creature, to sell it's new paper. This in combination with Science being a high profile journal makes it feel as if the claims in this publication are standing on more solid ground than they do. This is just my personal opinion but I think this is just bad science communication. It is something that will echo through the online sphere for years to come and does not in any way promote the caution that I would expect when claims like these are presented. Subsequently the ideas and evocative speech of the paper have already spawned a large amount of paleoart that goes for the largest and most speculative sides of it. Again: I think the size estimates in the paper are certainly possible, but I also think a more critical examination of the text is warranted when presented with such incredible claims. I am not here to kill your fun. But I also think that we are maybe looking at something even more interesting that the (at this point) already rather old trope of the mosasaur eating squid. At least to me a giant mollusk eats mollusk world is cooler.
AS ALWAYS, these are simply my opinions on these matters, but I thought there was enough uncritical yay and nay saying about this paper that I felt like it should warrant a reaction. I think the paper describes fascinating material and I eagerly await more!
Salem gets so much hate π
We don't understand it, because to us she's so beautiful π₯Ή She's literally a real life plushie π
The cutest little round face and chubby cheeks!!
Doodles from Friday's flocking paleostream featuring Dynamognathus, Juxia, Presbyornis, and Nimbacinus.

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#Paleostream 2/05/2026
here's this week's #Paleostream flocking results!
this week we drew Epidexipteryx (mine is a juvenile being chased by a Pterorhynchus), Witwatia, Ceratosuchus (the bird behind it is Diatryma), and Prognathodon (mine has caught a young Archelon)
Nassau Grouper
By Ferenc Lorincz, Hungary
World Nature Photography awards
Doodles from last last Friday's flocking paleostream featuring Brachiosaurus, Centrosaurus, Rauisuchus, and Muttaburrasaurus.
Results from the Flocking #paleostream
Epidexypteryx, Witwatia, Ceratosuchus and Prognathodon.
someone needs to iron out those wrinkles

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be nice to him its his first day!! πππ
Result from the Milia 5 #paleostream! This locality, from the late Pliocene of Greece, got a lot of attention in the early 2000s for the discovery of giant probocidean remains, most notably 5 m long tusks of "Mammut" borsoni, the European Mastodon.
The locality of Milia is suited in central Greece. Since it's discovery over 3300 fossil specimens have been excavated from this sand pit that gives us a good look at Europe just before the Ice Ages hit. The climate here was quite a bit more humid and maybe slightly warmer...
Instead of open woodland and bushland today, the Hyrcanian forests in Iran might be a somewhat good comparison. These old growth forests would have been full of massive trees, in this case a giant oak is setting the stage for us, with pigs and elephants gorging themselves...
on acorns and fresh leafs. Disturbed by all this commotion a Agriotherium mother is leading away her cubs while porcupines and tortoises supplement their died with some Homotherium bones. We choose the locality of Milia 5 specifically because it shows the highest diversity...
but also abundance of animals within Milia, with big amounts of Mammut, rhinos and deer suggesting a very productive ecosystem. While you would expect large elephants and maybe rhinos you also get more exotic animals like the giant tortoise Titanochelon or the last european...
Tapir, that is waiting shyly at the edge of the scene. Not everything got into this piece, but it's mostly species we have elsewhere as well. There is still more material but be published from and I am awaiting it eagerly! Size chart by Dynamo.