Spinosaurus, like any predator, likely had certain vulnerabilities. Its large size and aquatic adaptations could have made it less agile on land, potentially exposing it to threats from faster terrestrial predators. Additionally, its reliance on fish and aquatic prey may have limited its food sources in environments where such prey was scarce. Furthermore, its elongated jaws and specialized teeth, while effective for catching fish, might have been less suited for tackling larger terrestrial animals.
Spinosaurus.
spinosaurus
There is no evidence of cannibalism in Spinosaurus. However, many reptiles are cannibalistic on occasion, and there is a chance that Spinosaurus was, too. If it were, however, the only cases of cannibalism would be when large Spinosaurus killed and ate the young offspring of other Spinosaurus.
it can be spinosaurus giganotosauru or carcharodonthosaurus
spinosaurus because it's bigger
A spinosaurus is much larger than the baryonyx
That is the correct spelling of the genus name Spinosaurus (a large carnivorous dinosaur).
Spinosaurus eat Fish, Pterosaurs and Other Dinosaur
There is no spinosaurus but there are other spinosaurids,which are baryonyx and suchomimus
The dinosaur king of the jurassic was the mighty Spinosaurus
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.
Like other terrestrial animals, Spinosaurus walked on land using its legs and feet. Like other theropods, or meat eating dinosaurs, Spinosaurus was bipedal.