Guanlong

Guanlong
Release Version: Deluxe Upgrade

Size

SizeSmall
Height (m)1.1
Length (m)3
Weight (kg)75

Classification

Rating

Base Appeal68
Appeal (Per Hectare)117.2
Base Dominance76
Base AppealAppeal (Per Hectare)Base Dominance
Guanlong
Median female

Stats

Lifespan30 - 50
Resilience130
Attack60
Defence16
Medical Dart Resistance60
Sedative Resistance60
Poison Resistance155
Appetite38
Bite Size14

Security

Security RatingSecurity Rating: 1
Threat
None
Dinosaur Send / SummonNo

Environmental Needs

Comfort50% / 70% / 90%
Cover (m2)75913%
Pasture (m2)419072%
Prey (m2)4
Water (m2)849

Genome Trait Chances

Genetic Mods (Max)8
Thirst75%
Quenched
Appetite75%
Small Appetite
Resilience50%
Resilient
Habituation4%
Docile
Nocturnal16%
Nocturnal

Unlock requirements

Unlocked by retrieving the fossil from one of the following dig sites:

Dig SitesLocationsFossilsRequirements (Logistics)DurationCost
Shishugou Formation
Asia
China
Xinjiang
fossil_thoropoda_common
x2
fossil_thoropoda_uncommon
x2
fossil_thoropoda_rare
x1
34m$221,000

Synthesis

Eggs2 - 4
Requirements (Genetics)4
Scientists (Max)5
Duration35s
Cost$130,000
Cost (Genetic Mods)$6,500

Incubation

Requirements (Welfare)4
Scientists (Max)5
Duration2m
Cost$87,000

Breeding

Nest SizeMedium
Nest LocationNeutral
Breeding ArchetypeFast A
Eggs2 - 4
Compatibility0% - 70%
Requirements (Welfare)2
Duration1m
Duration (Incubation)2m 30s - 4m 30s
Duration (Postpartum)1h 11m
Cost$100,000

Disease

ImmuneBracken Poisoning
SusceptibleHookworms

Description

The name for this small tyrannosaurid dinosaur means ‘crown dragon’, named for the large, air-filled cranial crest it possessed. This predator measured about 3 meters in length, and reached maturity at around 7 years old.

Discovery

Preserved remains of a pair of Guanlong skeletons, one adult and one juvenile, were first discovered in the Wucaiwan area of Junggar Basin in China, buried in mudstone. A joint Chinese-American team discovered the dinosaur in 2002, and the Guanlong was first described to the scientific community in 2006.

Paleoecology

The Guanlong is the oldest-known of the tyrannosaurids, making it a distant ancestor of the famous Tyrannosaurus rex. The Guanlong had a decorative crest that may have been used to attract mates. They lived in what is now northwestern China about 160 million years ago, and were likely a secondary predator within its ecosystem, with a primitive carnosaur being the primary.