Ankylosaurus would have found food and water the same way animals do today. As it traveled, it would find edible plants, and it would eat them. As for water, they would keep track of local bodies of water, and they would visit them when they needed to drink.
Ankylosaurus ate low growing, tender plants. They couldn't reach vegetation much more than 4 feet above the ground. To find food, they would have traveled constantly, eating whatever edible plants they found.
no they eat all animals.
Primary consumer.
Ankylosaurus (ang-KLEE-O-sor-uss) was related to Euoplocephalus (EE-oo-plo-seF-LUss). It mainly fed on ferns.
Ankylosaurus was built very low to the ground, so they could only reach the leaves of low growing plants. Thus, they didn't eat the leaves of tall trees.
Ankylosaurus is, in and of itself, the scientific name of the species. The full name of the animal is Ankylosaurus magniventris.
Ankylosaurus ate low growing plants in its natural habitat. It would have known what was and wasn't edible either instinctively or by learning from its parents (if they were raised by their parents, which is unknown). If there were no edible plants in sight, the Ankylosaurus would travel until it found them.
Dingo's find food in a variety of ways. The hunt for food, they also eat plants that they find, they will also eat dead animals that they find.
Yes, gargoyleosaurus is an ankylosaurus.
They hunt for their food, kill it and you know just eat it
Hippopotamus are mostly herbivorous. They eat their food where they find it growing