Plains Smilohound, Ursocyon campestris, Smilohound, Thazvaar fauna, Geba wildlife, VESSELBORN, CHRISTOPHER JAEPHETH CUBY, GEBAN CHRONICLE, BOOK OF THE WITNESS, Greater Smilohound, Lesser Smilohound, Thazvaari predators, Era of Absolute Expansion, creatures codex

Plains Smilohound (Ursocyon campestris)

Alias: None
Origin: Inland Thazvaar (plains)

The Plains Smilohound is a wild, pack-dwelling predator native to the open plains of Inland Thazvaar. Descended from domesticated lines that fully reverted to feral behavior, it serves as an intermediate form between the Greater Smilohound (U. smiloides) and Lesser Smilohound (U. parvus). Its short, broad skull, reinforced jaw, and compact musculature are adapted for endurance hunting across sunbaked, broken terrain. A single-layered, ochre and stone-gray coat provides camouflage in grassy habitats. Known for its high-pitched yelps, barks, and long-distance calls, the Plains Smilohound hunts in coordinated packs, targeting large herbivores while rarely engaging humans unless provoked or territorial.

Lifespan

They live 15–25 years, reaching maturity at 3–5 years, with reproductive activity tied to periods of environmental stability on the plains.

Uses

Notes

Recorded in the Comprehensive Field Codex during the Era of Absolute Expansion (~3,000 years before modern Geba), Plains Smilohounds were noted for their reversion from domesticated origins and their crucial ecological presence. Their widespread vocal behavior and cooperative pack strategy continue to define their importance in Thazvaar’s grassland ecosystems. Extant and regionally dominant, they remain integral to both biodiversity and Thazvaari nomadic life.