I think some plants actually survived because they were able to adapt to cooler climates and the ones that became extinct couldn't. One of the survivng Late Cretaceous flowering plants is the Magnolia.
Dinosaurs survived by eating other dinosaurs or plants.
At the time of the dinosaurs, most large animals were reptiles and the dominant trees were conifers. Today, most large reptiles have been long extinct, and most large animals are mammals. The dominant plants are now flowering plants.
No, turtles,crocodiles, snakes and some plants survived the extinction event that wiped out the dinosaurs.
Dinosaurs did not die out because of plants. They died out because of a lack of plants after an asteroid impact blocked out sunlight for months or years. With all the plants dead, the dinosaurs starved.
Dinosaurs
Since the Mesozoic era, a lot of flowering plants have been dominated by trees and food bearing plants.
Ginko trees, ferns, cycads, conifers, and during the Cretaceous, flowering plants.
An antophyte is an alternative name for an anthophyte, a flowering plant or any extinct relative of a flowering plant.
seed plants and small mammals
Herbivorous dinosaurs ate plants. Plants that coexisted with dinosaurs include conifers, such as Auracaria and even Sequoia, cycads, ginkgoes, ferns, seed ferns, horsetails, and, toward the end of the Mesozoic, some flowering plants, including palms and primitive grasses.
Dinosaurs first appeared during the Triassic period, around 230 million years ago, while flowering plants (angiosperms) evolved later, around 140 million years ago during the Cretaceous period. Therefore, dinosaurs came before flowers in the timeline of Earth’s history. This means that for a significant portion of their existence, dinosaurs lived in a world without flowering plants.
Antarctica is the continent that has the fewest flowering plants.