Diet Analyzer

Explore dinosaur diets and adaptations

Analyze dinosaur diets based on their anatomical features. Explore how teeth shape, jaw mechanics, body proportions, and fossil evidence reveal whether a dinosaur was a herbivore, carnivore, omnivore, or specialist feeder.

恐竜を選択して食性と摂食適応を分析してください。

How to Use

  1. 1
    Search for a dinosaur

    Enter a genus or species name to load the morphological data profile, which includes tooth shape, jaw mechanics score, skull proportions, and known gut-content or coprolite evidence where available.

  2. 2
    Review the diet classification

    The tool returns a primary diet category — carnivore, herbivore, omnivore, piscivore, or insectivore — along with a confidence rating based on the quantity and quality of anatomical evidence.

  3. 3
    Compare anatomical features

    Expand the evidence panel to see how each morphological character contributes to the classification, with comparisons to functionally analogous modern taxa such as crocodilians or ratites.

About

Dietary ecology is central to understanding how dinosaur communities were structured. In any well-sampled fauna, carnivores consistently represent a small fraction of total biomass relative to herbivores, following the trophic pyramid seen in modern ecosystems. Cretaceous formations like the Dinosaur Park Formation in Alberta preserve predator-prey ratios broadly consistent with modern estimates, suggesting dinosaur ecosystems operated under the same energetic constraints as living ones.

Tooth replacement rate is an important indicator of diet. Theropods replaced teeth continuously throughout life, ensuring a sharp cutting edge was always available — a pattern seen today in crocodilians. Herbivorous dinosaurs evolved diverse solutions to the problem of plant processing: sauropod teeth were simple pegs replaced rapidly to compensate for wear, while hadrosaur dental batteries packed scores of teeth into a compound grinding structure unique among vertebrates.

Isotopic analysis of tooth enamel has added a new dimension to dietary reconstruction. Carbon isotope ratios distinguish between animals that consumed C3 plants (most Mesozoic vegetation) and C4 plants, while nitrogen isotopes track trophic level. Oxygen isotopes can indicate whether an animal was semi-aquatic. These geochemical proxies, combined with traditional morphological analysis, allow increasingly nuanced dietary inferences even from fragmentary specimens.

FAQ

How do scientists determine what a dinosaur ate?
Multiple lines of evidence contribute to dietary reconstruction. Tooth morphology is primary: serrated, blade-like teeth indicate flesh-cutting while broad, flat teeth with ridged enamel indicate plant maceration. Jaw kinetics, skull robustness, and muscle scar positions on bones inform bite force and gape. Direct evidence includes gut contents preserved in exceptional specimens, coprolites containing identifiable material, and toothmarks on bones attributable to specific taxa.
Were all large theropods active predators?
Not necessarily. Spinosauridae, which includes Spinosaurus and Baryonyx, show adaptations converging on piscivory: conical unserrated teeth similar to gharials, elongated snouts, and isotopic signatures in tooth enamel consistent with aquatic prey. Some ornithomimosaurs had toothless beaks and are interpreted as omnivores or filter-feeders. Even within the tyrannosaurids, juvenile animals had narrower, more blade-like teeth than adults, suggesting dietary shifts with ontogeny.
How did large herbivorous dinosaurs digest plant matter?
Sauropods and large ornithischians could not chew in the manner of modern mammals — they lacked the complex tooth batteries and jaw muscles for extensive oral processing. Sauropods likely relied on hindgut fermentation in a large, multi-chambered digestive tract, possibly aided by gastroliths (stomach stones) in some taxa. Hadrosaurs and ceratopsians had sophisticated dental batteries in which hundreds of teeth formed a continuous grinding surface, allowing them to process tough vegetation more efficiently.
Did any dinosaurs eat insects or small invertebrates?
Several small coelurosaurs are interpreted as insectivores based on tooth morphology and body size. Alvarezsaurids had highly reduced forelimbs with a single robust claw and are compared to modern anteaters, suggesting they broke open termite mounds or rotting wood. Scansoriopterygids, a bizarre clade of small tree-climbing dinosaurs, may have exploited bark-dwelling invertebrates. Dietary reconstruction for small-bodied taxa is especially dependent on rare preservation.
What is the significance of gastroliths in diet analysis?
Gastroliths are stones found within the body cavity of fossil vertebrates, inferred to have resided in the stomach or gizzard. In modern birds and crocodilians, such stones assist in grinding food. Some sauropods, notably Seismosaurus and Diplodocus, preserve large polished stones in anatomical position. However, not all smoothed stones found near dinosaur remains are genuine gastroliths — taphonomic processes can introduce rounded stones from stream deposits into a skeleton. Their presence is therefore evaluated in the context of the burial environment.