Toggle menu
Toggle preferences menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
You must create an account or log in to edit.

Aloana Animal Sanctuary

Scope: Strataverse
Scope: Strataverse/Greene Foundation
From Amaranth Legacy, available at amaranth-legacy.community

Greene
This content is a part of the Greene Foundation within the Strataverse.

Aloana Sanctuary is a non-profit Animal Sanctuary in Quiet Pastures, Iowa. It takes in animals from all across the country that are in need of a home or safe space to live, residents include but are not limited to injured animals from rehab centers that cant be released, surrendered or illegal pets, donations from zoos and aquariums and problem animals that would have otherwise been euthanized. They also work with M.Y.T.H.O.S. and the Greene Foundation to keep an eye out for various anomalous and cryptozoological entities.

Aloana Sanctuary is not open to visitors but they do host online classes on internet streaming platforms and travel to local schools and libraries to do in person demonstrations with the animals.

Residents

Animal Profile: Nan

Animal Profile: Squirming Jack

Animal Profile: Princess

Meet Our Animals!: Transparent Flamingoes

Meet Our Animals!: Great Apes and Monkeys

Bonobo 54 Modified Primates that were test subjects at Qu Labs were they escaped along with Theid Theron. They possess drastically heightened intelligence. After City Officials demanded that the animals were to be destroyed, They were captured alongside the other lab escapees and several wild New York animals that had mutated themselves and decided to live with them.
Chimpanzee 104
Common Squirrel Monkey 19
Crab-eating Macaque 16
Pig-tailed Macaque 4
Rhesus Macaque 26
Vervet Monkey 10

Meet Our Animals!: Modified Parrots

African Gray Parrot 4 Modified Parrots that were test subjects at Qu Labs were they escaped along with Theid Theron. They possess drastically heightened intelligence.

Meet Our Animals!: Permian Therapsids and Reptiles

Annatherapsidus petri Victims of MYTHOS subject 047. Once the population of several small Siberian villages affected by the virus. Once infected, the flesh of the victims was contorted into various amorphous blobs and mangled piles, often fusing together with other nearby flesh. The victims stayed in this state for about 7 ½ years, in a state of half-conciousness. This was thought to be the end result of the virus’s evolution, until nodes of flesh began forming, similar to an amniotic womb and the cells were changed into that of animals from the Permian period.The victims are conscious and aware of their humanity, though they are either unaware or have difficulty remembering the ‘flesh-pile’ stage as it were, despite previous tests showing that at the time, the victims were in fact aware of their situation and in intense distress. Whether this is a result of their minds blocking out the experience as a trauma response or an effect of the virus is unknown
Chroniosuchus licharevi
Chthonosaurus velocidens
Dvinia prima
Dvinosaurus primus
Elph borealis
Fortunodon amalitzkii
Inostrancevia alexandri
Inostrancevia latifrons
Jarilinus mirabilis
Karpinskiosaurus secundus
Kotlassia prima
Leogorgon klimovensis
Obirkovia gladiator
Pravoslavlevia parva
Procynosuchus viadimirensis
Scutosaurus karpinskii
Scutosaurus tuberculatus
Suchonosaurus minimus
Uralocynodon tverdokhlebovae
Vivaxosaurus trautsholdi

Meet Our Animals!: A Variety of Monsters

Meet Our Animals: Whales through the Ages