Pyroraptor V1 (SciiFii)

Pyroraptor europeansis (meaning "European fire thief"), also known as the green goblin, is a species of dromaeosaurid dinosaur that originally lived from the Late Cretaceous of what is now southern France and northern Spain during the late Campanian and early Maastrichtian stages, approximately 70.6 million years ago, as an extinct species, Pyroraptor olympius, and was once extinct, but has since been brought back from extinction by SciiFii. It was originally planned to be included in Cretaceous Park: China, but a traffic accident occurred on May 27th, 2040, near Paris, France, killing the driver and letting out all 25 Pyroraptor europeansis into the wilderness, and has ever since established breeding feral populations of around 1 million Pyroraptor europeansis in mainland Europe. It is a rather small dromaeosaur that can grow on average of around 5 feet long and weighing about as much as a wild turkey, although there are cases of Pyroraptor europeansis growing to be slightly larger, about 7 feet long. Like all "natural" dromaeosaurs, it is a carnivore that mainly prey on animals about the size of or smaller than itself (if hunting alone), but can hunt prey twice its size if it is hunting in packs consisting of its (fully-grown or subadult) siblings. It is either a solitary animal or a social animal, depending on an individual, however, it generally does not live in packs of unrelated Pyroraptor europeansis, and can only mate with Pyroraptor europeansis of different genders if it is hunting alone. Pyroraptor europeansis can lay around 3-7 eggs at a time, the eggs hatch about the same speed as the chicken eggs hatching, and the young are cared for by their parents until they are juvenilles, when they must fend for themselves, and the siblings of around the same age can live with its own siblings if it wants to, even if its siblings are mothers/fathers of their own hatchlings. The conservation status of Pyroraptor europeansis is Least Concern due to successful conservation efforts, the animal's wide range and its tolerance to most of human activities.