The most efficient means of locomotion for a pterodactyl would have been flight. They could walk or climb by folding their wings partially, and using their wing digits as front feet, walking on all fours.
Predatory dinosaurs, if they were lucky enough to catch them on the ground.
yes, yes they can...
Pterodactylus would have flown above the ground. While flying, they would have searched for prey that they could hunt and eat, small animals such as lizards, amphibians, primitive mammals, fish, and possibly insects.
Pterosaurs were quadrupedal, using their wings not only to fly, but also to walk. This was also tha case for Pterodactylus. They were less than 1 ft tall when they walked, and they measured about 3 ft long.
No. Pterodactyls were actually quite small. And even the largest relative of the pterodactyl, quetzalcoatlus, could not pick anything nearly that heavy.
Pterodactylus, like all pterosaurs, was quadrupedal. They folded their wings so that their three fingers could touch the ground. This way their wings and their legs could bear their weight. They walked plantigrade, which means that they walked on the entire soles of their feet, not just their toes.
The likely word is the flying dinosaur (pterosaur) called the pterodactyl.
That is the correct spelling for pterodactyl, one type of flying dinosaur (pteradon).
No and the Pterodactyl is not a dinosaur. It is a flying reptile.
It's "easy" to walk on ground by comparison, because it's bloody near impossible to walk on air or water.
When we walk on the ground our foot pushes the ground backward, and in return, the ground pushes our foot forward. The forward reaction exerted by the ground pushes our foot forward. The forward reaction exerted by the ground on our foot makes us walk forward.