Technically yes, Baryonyx is a carnivore. Fish are animals and a animal that eats another is a carnivore. Also a fossil of Baryonyx suggests that they may have possibly preyed on Iguanadon too.
It is an herbivore by genes but carnivore by nature
The Carnivorous Plants was created in 1942.
Typically, sea snails are carnivorous. Some land snails are also carnivorous
Typically, sea snails are carnivorous. Some land snails are also carnivorous
Non-carnivorous plants can live near carnivorous one. Carnivorous plants don't eat other plants or anything like that. What you might be referring to is the fact that carnivorous plants tend to grow in certain environments that many other plants couldn't survive in. Specifically, they grow in areas with soils that have very little nutrients. Carnivorous plants can live there because they can get the nutrients they need from their prey rather than from the soil. There are other plants that are adapted to those types of ecosystems is other ways (non-carnivorous ways), and those plants can live alongside carnivorous plants. Most plants can't live in those environments, though.
The proper name for Baryonyx is Baryonyx walkeri.
Baryonyx was a large carnivorous dinosaur that lived during the Early Cretaceous period, approximately 130 to 125 million years ago. Fossil evidence indicates it primarily inhabited regions that are now part of Europe, particularly in what is now the United Kingdom. Baryonyx is believed to have lived near rivers and coastal areas, where it likely hunted fish and other aquatic prey.
The smallest carnivorous dinosaurs, such as Compsagnathus, are insects and small vertebrates. Large carnivorous dinosaurs usually ate large and small herbivorous dinosaurs. Some, however, ate fish, including Spinosaurus and Baryonyx.
Baryonyx is in Suborder Theropoda.
Baryonyx was created in 1986.
Baryonyx ate fish and possibly carrion.
Baryonyx walkeri was created in 1986.
A spinosaurus is much larger than the baryonyx
Seismosaurus is a dubious name. The dinosaur is actually called diplodocus. Diplodocus was far larger than Baryonyx.
Baryonyx was 8 - 9 m long and weigh up to 2 tonnes.
everyone always underestimates baryonyx. and that still is too small to be rudy. it was actually a spineless spinosaurus. AND BARYONYX IS FLIPPING 43 FEET LONG AND 11,900 POUNDS!
Baryonyx lived near large sources of water where it could find lots of fish.