Southern Giraffe Beast

Southern giraffe beast is a species of modern day non-avian dinosaur part of a Sauropod family. It is among the last sauropods alive today, along with the Asian giraffe beast and the American giraffe beast. It is named because of its long neck like a giraffe. Its ancestors, the Alamosaurus, have strangely survived. Sure the adult Alamosaurus during the K-T extinction caused by an asteroid did died, but the hatchlings didn't die and instead have survived, in a world without most predatory dinosaurs, many of the hatchling Alamosaurus survived to adulthood and flourished without large predators (including Tyrannosaurs, which sadly didn't make it through the extinction) around. American giraffe beasts are native to parts of the United States (including Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, California, Oregon, Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, Colorado, Louisiana, Mississippi, Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina, and Florida), Mexico, Central America, and South America. Unlike the American giraffe beast, southern giraffe beasts haven't changed its body plan or form of locomotion for millions of years, so it resembles its Mesozoic ancestors. They mainly feed on leaves, fruits, ferns, and cycads. Their natural habitats includes swamps, tropical rainforests, subtropical forests, temperate forests, temperate grasslands, and savannas, but can also thrive in human settlements. Depending on a species, they range from the size of a smallest Mesozoic Alamosaurus species to the size of the largest Mesozoic species of Alamosaurus, making them among the largest land animals alive today.