Arctic Ornithopod

An Arctic ornithopod (Boreadontosaurus americanum) is a species of emu-sized small feather non-avian ornithopod dinosaur that originated from various species of small ornithopods which came from Early to Late Cretaceous Earth, but has since been brought back from extinction through time travel and brought into 1850s North America for sports hunting, ever since they flourish there despite competition from native deer. They are made up of hybrids between Leaellynasaura, Hypsilophodon, Parksosaurus, and Thescelosaurus through genetic engineering before being released into Holocene North America. They are almost completely herbivorous, feeding mainly on fruits, leaves, shrubs, ferns, horsetails, and non-poisonous fungi like their Cretaceous ancestors, but they also feed on vegetables, grasses, roots, tubers, bulbs, aquatic plants, and even man-made plant-based foods (such as bread) due to genetic engineering, however, they can occasionally also feed on insects, spiders, scorpions, dead fish, and carrion of land animals to supplement their diets (possibly due to having some DNA of omnivorous modern animals like raccoons and crows). The conservation status of Arctic ornithopods is Least Concern due to successful conservation efforts, their wide range, and their tolerance to most human activities, including being able to adapt to life in the cities and suburbs.