Systematic: "Aves" (Bird), Psittaciformes (speakers of tropical birds Group), the parrot family (parrots group, parakeets, ect.)
Etymology: From "Tyranno" the tyrant "Ornis" the bird in Greek. The species name "Rex" means "king".
Cousin of the XXI century: Psittacus erithacus, the African gray parrot of Africa.
Height: 3 meters for males and 2.50 meters for females.
Distribution: The species lives in Eurafrique, haunting the tropical forests and mangroves.
Morphology: This giant parrot has no wings. Its hind legs are well developed and equipped with sharp claws. His horny beak has pseudo-sharp, tooth-like structures like razorblades. These appear due to reactivation of dinosaurian ancestral genes. The thumb, which allowed their distant cousins to maintain current branches, has regressed so that it forms a catch. Sexual dimorphism is marked.
Ethology: The brain of the T-rex of the future is very developed, as with any other parrot. The brain areas of communication and cognition are more important, what makes Tyrannornis a very intelligent and social bird. Intraspecific communication is indeed based on a complex spoken language using infrasonic sounds. Unlike its cousins, generally eaters of fruit, Tyrannornis rex is a purely carnivorous predator who hunts of large prey in groups. This change in diet is a form of adaptation that is equivalent to that of the panda, a carnivore that became a mostly herbivorous omnivore. Populations are grouped into "clans" in the form and size of the ridge, which shield office. During drought periods, there are some clans declaring war: the ritual is orchestrated on both sides by an old chief who sends young males in to fight. The battles are bloody. They stop when the first male is killed.
Reproduction: The female lays 3-6 eggs in a nest every year. She makes it by digging in the ground and, after laying her eggs, covers it with plant debris. She protects her brood fiercely, and she teaches them how to survive after they have hatched until they reach maturity. The growth of chicks is two times faster than the current ostriches. The "T-rex of the future" has no wings but sometimes even some chicks are born with stubs of sorts: these stubs are then systematically devoured by the mother.
Diversity:The kind Tyrannornis counts not only Tyrannornis rex, There are many different species:
Tyrannornis werberi, the smallest and most agile, haunts the equatorial jungles and deep forests.
Tyrannornis lehoucqi, desertic species, has particularly developed auditory abilities allowing him to hunt at night.
Tyrannornis imperator, larger species and aggressive haunting arid savannahs and steppes. This is in fact the ones who hunt giraffornis.