Yes but there is more to find
No Stegosaurus nests have ever been found. However, they probably laid their eggs in nests made of vegetation like most other dinosaurs. The rotting plant matter would keep the eggs warm.
No Stegosaurus nests have ever been found. However, they probably laid their eggs in nests made of vegetation like most other dinosaurs. The rotting plant matter would keep the eggs warm.
Fossil dinosaurs nests have been found with dinosaurs sitting on their nests like birds do. This is not surprising as our modern day birds are descended from raptor dinosaurs.
There exists various nests on that tree. This is a sentence containing the word nests.
No nests or eggs of Spinosaurus have ever been found. Thus, it is impossible for us to know whether Spinosaurus even took care of its young at all. If they did, we definitely don't know how they took care of their young.
It has been theorized that this was done in the same manner as a modern reptile.
Tyrannosaurus rex eggs were relatively small compared to the size of the adult dinosaur, measuring about 30 to 40 centimeters (12 to 16 inches) in length. These eggs were typically oval-shaped and laid in clutches, with some fossilized nests suggesting that a T. rex could have laid around 15 to 20 eggs at a time. The specific size and shape of the eggs can vary, as they are often found in different fossilized conditions.
Pretty much all dinosaurs lay eggs, so Spinosaurus likely did too.
Archaeopteryx probably slept in the trees. If they made nests, the nests would have been for the eggs, as is the case for modern birds.
The dinosaur that laid the largest eggs was the Hypselosaurus. Fossilized eggs attributed to this dinosaur have been found to be up to 18 inches in length. These eggs are believed to have been laid in nests similar to those of modern-day birds, indicating that Hypselosaurus exhibited some level of parental care.
It is believed that all mother dinosaurs laid their eggs in nests. However, only nests from some species have been found. Of these, Maiasaura and Massospondylus fed their young and protected them, but Troodon left the young to fend for themselves as soon as they hatched.
Grasshoppers do not build nests. They are not territorial, they lay eggs in the soil and then more on once the eggs hatch.