Grass only evolved late in the Cretaceous period so only the dinosaurs near the end of the age of dinosaurs would have had grass available. Remains of early grasses have been found in dinosaur coprolites of this period.
In The Jurrassic Period There was because there were trees and flowers so there had to be Grass hoped this gave you more information about the Dinosaur time's.
No dinosaurs did not eat grass
Yes.
Teeth
A relationship of this is geese eating on grass around them because herbivores eat plants and geese eat grass and grass is a plant so this is a good relationship of this.
Plant-eating dinosaurs are called Herbivores [herb-IH-vores] (like veggieterians). Meat-eating dinosaurs are called Carnivores [car-NIH-vores] (like the Tyrannosaurus Rex). Dinosaurs that eat both are called Omnivores [ahm-NIH-vores] (like most humans) hope this helps.
Any grass/plant eating animal like deer,and rabits
It may eaten plant-eating dinosaurs such as gastonia,camarasaurus or brachiosaurus.
mosasaur was a strict carnivor. there were accually no plant eating dinosaurs that lived in water.
It depends on the type of dinosaurs carnivore or a plant eater. Plant Eater=A plant eater would eat shrubs, leaves, flowers any type of plant I would think. Carnivore=Meat eg.other dinosaurs or animals. === === It depends on the type of dinosaurs carnivore or a plant eater. Plant Eater=A plant eater would eat shrubs, leaves, flowers any type of plant I would think. Carnivore=Meat eg.other dinosaurs or animals. === ===
Sauropods, who were plant-eating dinosaurs, used rocks to grind their food to aid in digestion. These rocks are called gastroliths.
yes
Wildabeest are plant eating animals so mostly eat grass, leaves, plants, roots, twigs, and similar foods.
No. Cows are herbivores, meaning that they are strictly plant-eating animals, not omnivores nor carnivores. Cows eat grass, hay and silage and should eat just grass, hay and silage.
no grass spiders do not eat grass. They get their name from living IN the grass NOT eating the grass.