Yes, at least, that's what its skull shape suggests. It was long and thin, like a crocodile. Crocodiles eat small animals and fish when food is scarce. So, it seems likely that Spinosaurus at small animals and fish. However, we only know Spinosaurus from a few incomplete skeletons, and the original specimens were annihilated when Germany was bombed, so we don't know to much about it. maybe it was powerful enough to hunt the larger sauropods in the area. We'll have to wait for more fossils to confirm the evidence.
The Spinosaurus ate whatever freshwater it could catch in the swamps of North Africa between 112 and 97 million years ago. One type of fish that lived in the same place at the same time as Spinosaurus was Mawsonia, a type of coelocanth that could grow up to several meters in length.
Spinosaurus eat Fish, Pterosaurs and Other Dinosaur
Spinosaurus had long, narrow jaws with non-serrated, interlocking teeth. It would wade into a swamp and stand still, waiting for a fish, such as a huge coelocanth called Mawsonia, and then it would snatch the fish with its jaws. Spinosaurus may have even had pressure sensors in its jaw, so that when the jaw was submerged, it could feel a fish swim by without being able to see it.
Spinosaurus aegyptiacus lived in coastal mangrove swamps, eating fish.
Spinosaurus primarily ate fish, such as the 10 foot Mawsonia coelocanth.
They eat sea fish and fish.
They eat sea fish and fish.
No, they didn't. The Tyrannosaurus came from North America and the Spinosaurus came from Africa. Also, if they did overlap, Spinosaurus would be too large and powerful for tyrannosaurus to eat.
Based on the shape of its teeth and claws, scientists believe that spinosaurus primarily fed on fish.
The type of fish is not mentioned in the bible. But it was river fish caught in the river Galilee.
Whales eat krill and other fish. Fish eat other fish, depending on what type of fish it is.
Limestone
no a fish will not eat a terrapin but the terrapin just might eat the fish LOL :-)