answersLogoWhite

0

What is a dinosaurs habitat?

User Avatar

Anonymous

15y ago
Updated: 8/17/2019

someplace hot. Remember they're reptiles. They can't control their body heat. They need a lot of sun and or humidity to stay alive.

For the specific weather for each period, type in what was the climate like for dinosaurs(I answered that too)

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What is the habitat of dinosaurs?

Jurassic Park.


What are the dinosaurs habitat?

Mostly jungles.


What destroyed the dinosaurs habitat?

The dinosaurs were killed by a very, very large rock called a woodwind.


What will effect a penguins habitat?

Dinosaurs love to eat penguins. In the unfortunate event of the resurrection of dinosaurs, penguins will most likely go extinct.


Did dinosaurs have any shelter?

Yes. The natural foliage of their habitat's provided shelter.


Where are the meat eaters live in?

The fossils of meat eating dinosaurs have been found on every continent and in every type of habitat that existed during the Mesozoic (the Age of Dinosaurs).


How did the tyrannosaurus rex affect other dinosaurs habitat?

Tyrannosaurus rex was the top predator of its habitat, so its main function was to keep the other dinosaurs' populations under control by eating the weak, sick and young, and also keeping the environment clean by eating dead animals.


What features do sharks have for there habitat?

Sharks have been around for 400 million years,before the dinosaurs have been a live.


Where is a dinosaurs natural habitat?

There were thousands of different species of dinosaurs, and different species lived in different places and habitats at different times. Dinosaurs lived on every continent between 250 and 65.5 million years ago. Some dinosaurs lived in the desert, such as Velociraptor, Protoceratops, and Coelophysis. Other dinosaurs lived on semi-arid plains that were covered in ferns and had scattered forests. Such dinosaurs include Diplodocus, Brachiosaurus, Dryosaurus, Allosaurus, and Stegosaurus. That type of habitat no longer exists, though, as it has been replaced by grasslands. Other dinosaurs lived in swamps, such as Spinosaurus, or on coastal floodplains, such as Triceratops, Ankylosaurus, Edmontosaurus, Corythosaurus, and Tyrannosaurus. There were even dinosaurs in Antarctica's polar forests, which were somewhat similar to the boreal forests of Canada today. These include Antarctosaurus, Antarctopelta, Cryolophosaurus, and Leaellynasaura.


What animals killed dinosaurs?

Mostly other dinosaurs. However, there were some ferocious non-dinosaurs during the Mesozoic, such as giant crocodiles (e.g., Phobsuchus) which could have killed and eaten all but the very biggest dinos. Some of the great sea-lizards -- also non-dinosaurs -- during the period could have killed dinosaurs if they'd encountered them, but such combats would have been unlikely since each type of creature lived in a different habitat.


Which habitat did the dinosaurs live?

Dinosaurs lived on all different continents in climates ranging from dry deserts in Pangaea and Asia to semi-arid plains in North and South America, polar forests that went dark all winter in Antarctica, semi-arid forests on the islands of Europe, mangrove swamps in North Africa, and coastal floodplains in North America. If you include the fact that birds are dinosaurs, though, than any habitat you can think of from the open ocean to the Arctic tundra to tropical rainforests and open grasslands has dinosaurs, even today.


How do you think we can live with dinosaurs in harmony?

First, we'd have to learn to live in harmony with the natural environment today. Large animals like dinosaurs would be more vulnerable to the effects of habitat destruction from humans than modern animals. If we could learn to live in harmony with nature, the question becomes whether we're going back in time to live with them or we're recreating them to live with us. If we brought dinosaurs back and let them roam wild, they would devastate ecosystems until said ecosystems could no longer support them. If we went back in time to live with them, we might be able to coexist if we treated nature with the utmost respect and left plenty of habitat for the dinosaurs. However, the biggest consideration would be us introducing dangerous microbes to their habitat, or their habitat containing disease to which we have no immunity.