Eastern Duckbill

Eastern duckbill are a species of modern day non-avian Ornithopod dinosaur native to Japan, China, Mongolia, North Korea, and South Korea. It is descended from a group of Charonosaurus that strangely survived despite being a very large almost-elephant sized animal, it is possible that they had used caves as shelter for protection against the super-sandstorm and meteor showers caused by the K-T asteroid impact, eventually, the herd survived and flourished once again like their Cretaceous ancestors did. They are herbivores, feeding mainly on grass (unlike their ancestors), leaves, flowers, ferns, cycads, fruits, roots, and tubers. Depending on a subspecies, they range from the size of a common hippopotamus to the size of the African elephant. Their natural habitats includes deserts, scrublands, savannas, boreal grasslands, temperate grasslands, boreal forests, temperate forests, subtropical forests, tropical rainforests, jungles, and swamps, but can thrive very well in human settlements.