Southern Brown Wounder

A southern brown wounder (Pectinodon Mississippius) is a species of non-avian theropod dinosaur part of a troodont family, and is descended from a group of Pectinodon that survived K-T extinction by escaping into caverns with lots of food and water, and remained unchanged as a genus ever since the Cretaceous. It is an omnivore and feeds mainly on fruits, leaves, roots, tubers, cycads, ferns, horsetails, mosses, insects, fish, frogs, smaller reptiles, birds, eggs, small mammaos, and carrion. They are about the size of few species of wounders of the genus Troodon, but despite this, brown wounders generally ignore and leave eastern and western wounders alone as they often prefer different sources of food when the other feeds on the different type of food at a time. They are native to Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, New Mexico, and eastern Arizona, unable to naturally colonize California due to tall mountain ranges, but with a help of humans, some brown wounders were introduced successfully in California and flourish really well despite slight competition from native western wounders. They also adapt to and flourish in life in the cities and suburbs really well, even becoming completely tame towards sapient species/beings and dylanuses, and they no longer prey on pets nor domestic livestock as humans often kill predators that hunted domestic animals, so brown wounders learned from these events and ever since only prey on other urban and suburban wildlife such as coyotes, bobcats, deer, pigs, peccaries, tapirs, and other wild prey animals.