Content
Inostrancevia alexandri
“ It's a small yet extremely potent killing machine. Stephen, you need to locate it; if it's still out there, run.”
– Connor Charles
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Synapsida
Class: Therapsida
Order: †Gorgonopsia
Family: †Gorgonopsidae
Subfamily: †Inostranceviinae
Genus: †Inostrancevia
Species: †Inostrancevia alexandri
Descendant: †gorgonopsid
Named by: Vladimir Prokhorovich Amalitskii and Henry Neville Hutchinson
Year Published: 1910
Size: 3.5 meters long in length; 300 kilograms in weight (661.3 lbs)
Lifespan: 40 years
Activity: Crepuscular 🌇
Thermoregulate: Endotherm
Type(s): Synapsids (†Gorgonopsids)
Title(s):
Russia's Permian Predator
Old Tiger
Pantheon(s):
Terran/Gaian 🇺🇳
Russian 🇷🇺
Time Period: Late Permian Wuchiapingian, 259.0–252.3
Alignment: Oblivious
Threat Level: ★★★★★★★
Diet: Carnivorous 🥩🥓🐟🪲
Element(s): none
Inflict(s): Sundered 💔, Bleeding 🩸, Elemental Res Down 🔽
Weakness(es): Fire 🔥, Water 🌊, Rock 🪨, Air 🌬️, Electric ⚡, Ice ❄️, Light 💡, Arcane ✨, Fae 🧚
Casualties:
PAPRIN
†Alexander Bogdanov
600 Bolsheviks
450 Russian peasants
12 Ukrainians
5 Belarusians
†6000 Red Army members
20+ Tatars
7000 cows
1500 sheep
120 deer
†600 aurochs
TROQA
???
Based On: itself
Conservation Status:
Earth (Holocene): Extinct (EX) – IUCN Red List (real-life) / Vulnerable (VU) – IUCN Red List (alternative)
Reinachos: Least Concern (LC) – IUCN Red List
Delphia: Endangered (EN) – IUCN Red List
Sawintir: Critically Endangered (CR) – IUCN Red List
Earth Subpopulation
Reinachos Subpopulation
Delphia/Thatrollwa Subpopulation
Sawintir Subpopulation
The Great Vulchae (Inostrancevia alexandri; Russian: Иностранцевия, Обыкновенный Вулхай, Обыкновенный Иностранцевия) is an extinct genus of carnivorous therapsids, containing the largest members of the family Gorgonopsidae, predators characterized by long, saber-tooth-like canines.
This creature was named after the Russian geologist Aleksandr Inostrantsev. Vulchae is the Anglicization and Latinization form of the Russian word: волк “volk”, which means “wolf.”
Inostrancevia had a large, compact, four-legged body with a large head and snout, and it possessed mammalian specializations, including differentiated (heterodont) tooth shape, a fully developed temporal fenestra, pillar-like rear legs, and ear bones. Their tough, leathery hide enabled them to endure several rounds of gunfire and even the vicious claws of a mythical or futuristic creature in all realms.
The species in Inostrancevia were the largest gorgonopsids known; known individuals have total body lengths reaching up to 3.5 m and long, narrow skulls up to 60 cm long. Like several other gorgonopsids, Inostrancevia was characterized by strongly developed canine teeth, with those of the upper jaw up to 15 cm long, the root corresponding to half its length. Their bodies were slender, with rather short legs. Inostrancevia shared its habitat with Scutosaurus, which it likely preyed upon. Their total body lengths, reaching up to 3.5 meters and long, narrow skulls up to 60 cm long, weighted around 250 kilograms.
The massive fangs of Inostrancevia were utilized to stab and slash huge victims, probably targeting the soft tissues or neck. It possessed a strong bite because of the huge temporal holes in the skull for powerful jaw muscles. To make effective use of its saber teeth, the mouth could open to a nearly 90° angle.
Inostrancevia has agile, mammal-like movement because it can move more quickly and effectively than sprawling reptiles due to its semi-erect leg posture. It might be able to swiftly run short distances in order to ambush prey. Because of their enormous eye sockets, which indicate superior vision, Inostrancevia had keen senses. Its later mammalian relatives most likely inherited its keen sense of smell for tracking prey.
Inostrancevia may have possessed a somewhat warm-blooded physiology as a therapsid, which would have given it more energy efficiency and endurance than cold-blooded reptiles. Inostrancevia's massive body was designed to slam weak walls, such as plywood or ceramic plates, or closed doors.
It preyed on large herbivores like the pareiasaur Scutosaurus and other synapsids, reptiles, and insects. Once Inostrancevia smelled blood from its prey, it would relentlessly track and pursue its prey at all costs. After hunting down and killing their prey, Inostrancevia sometimes stored it in trees to eat later, in a manner that mirrored the behavior displayed by modern-day leopards.
Inostrancevia was one of the largest carnivores of the Permian and would have filled the ecological niche that big cats fill today, like modern-day tigers and jaguars. It would have also been different from those cats because it would live in the type of environment that lions live in (only far more harsh), but it would have acted like a massive modern-day tiger in that it would have hunted alone. Inostrancevia would have been an extremely fast runner over long distances.
It would have been very territorial in that other predators, or Inostrancevia, were never welcome, similar to today's large carnivores. Its hunting method would have been to lie in wait for an unsuspecting prey item, then it would have bound after the creature, using its speed to run down the animal, then bite the neck until it died of blood loss, suffocation, or both. Then it would have eaten as much as it could. Due to its extremely harsh and arid environment, it would have been a dull color like grey or brown to blend in with the environment so it could sneak up on its prey.
The Salarevo formation in particular (a horizon where Inostrancevia hails from) was deposited in a seasonal, semi-arid to arid area with multiple shallow water lakes that were periodically flooded. The Paleoflora of much of European Russia at the time was dominated by a genus of Peltaspermaceaen, Tatarina, and other related genera, followed by ginkophytes and conifers. On the other hand, ferns were relatively rare, and sphenophytes were only locally present.
Although certain therapsids were progressing toward live birth, Inostrancevia is most likely egg-laying. Although later therapsids displayed early mammalian characteristics, there is little indication of parental care.
Inostrancevia were patient and implacable hunters who could gallop at a top speed of 43 km/h (26 mph) and had a strong sense of smell. Inostrancevia used stealth and brief bursts of speed as part of her hunting strategy. It was probably an ambush predator. Inostrancevia attacked with swift bites, causing deep wounds with its saber fangs. Like saber-toothed cats later did, it might have waited for the victim to become weak from blood loss before completing the murder.
Similar to contemporary big cats and their territories, Inostrancevia is a solitary hunter, and each individual probably dominated a wide hunting region, therefore there is no indication of pack hunting. To avoid the midday heat and capitalize on prey activity, Inostrancevia may be crepuscular, meaning it is active at dawn or dusk.
Inostrancevia are unfriendly, Permian-era prehistoric creatures that can pose a serious threat to humans. They are solitary, territorial apex predators of the late Paleozoic epoch that are strong and unpredictable, especially when they feel threatened or trapped, even though they usually avoid humans. When humans or other past or present creatures encroach on their territory or corner them, Inostrancevia turn hostile.
The various species inhabited northern Russia and nearby countries during the Upper Tatarian, a Russian regional stage equivalent to the Wuchiapingian stage of the Late Permian period. Inostrancevia lived in most biomes, much like tigers.
Movement Pattern: Nomadic
Individual Type: Solo
Population Trend: Stable
Population: 0
Locomotion: Terrestrial
Habitat: Taiga; Montane Grasslands and Shrublands, Temperate Grasslands, Savannas, and Shrublands; Subtropical Grasslands, Savannas, and Shrublands; Tropical Grasslands; Tropical Savannas and Shrublands; Mediterranean Forests, Woodlands, and Scrub; Mushroom Forests; Mushroom Fields; Deserts and Xeric Shrublands; Badlands; Flooded Grasslands and Savannas; Swamp; Bayous/Billabongs; Air-breathing Coral Reefs; Graveyard Vale; Warm Ghost Town; Cold Ghost Town; Ruined Skyscraper.
Earth:
Extinct: Belarus; Mongolia; Poland; Russia; Ukraine
Inostrancevia can be tamed via their babies with meat and milk.
Inostrancevia was one of the last top predators of the Permian period before the devastating Permian-Triassic mass extinction decimated ninety percent of life on Earth. All animals on planet Earth and Sawintir were the product of forced evolution, which was Inostrancevia created by gods, angels, elves, and fairies to produce a large, robust, and obedient workforce.
During fieldwork at the Nooitgedacht farm in the Karoo Basin of South Africa, under the direction of co-author Jennifer Botha from the University of the Witwatersrand, Nthaopa Ntheri and John Nyaphuli found two specimens of giant gorgonopsians. Christian F. Kammerer and his colleagues publish a revision in 2023, after the processing of the fossils, in which they unanticipatedly determine that these specimens belong to the genus Inostrancevia. This is a major first because the genus had only previously been documented in Russia.
Bogdan (Богдан)
Geogra (Геогра)
Filov (Филов)
Borris (Боррис)
Antonio (Антонио)
Ruslan (Руслан)
Alexei (Алексей)
Coming soon
Coming soon
Coming soon
https://www.deviantart.com/ognimdo2002/art/Inostrancevia-alexandri-885077577
https://www.deviantart.com/ognimdo2002/art/Inostrancevia-alexandri-2023-978747702
http://www.prehistoric-wildlife.com/species/i/inostrancevia.html
- Diagnoses of the new forms of vertebrates and plants from the upper Permian of North Dvina - Bulletin of the Russian Academy of Sciences. 16 (6): 329–340 - Vladimir P. Amalitsky - 1922.
- Gorgonopsidae from the North Dvinsky excavations of V. P. Amalitsky - Academy of Sciences of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics - P. A. Pravoslavlev - 1927.
- Tetrapods from the East European Placket—Late Paleozoic Natural Territorial Complex - Proceedings of the Paleontological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences 283: 1–200 - M. F. Ivakhenko - 2001.