Dinosaur Diet
The following questions were answered by dinosaur expert Don Lessem.
Q: Would a dinosaur eat us if it were alive today?
A: If dinosaurs were alive today, some would try to eat us, but most
would be plant-eaters. I think we could outsmart the nasty ones and
probably outrun most of them!
Q: The archaeopteryx had bird hips (right?) but it ate insects. Is it
true that all bird-hipped dinosaurs were vegetarians and if so, what's
the deal?
A: I'm not sure what the deal is either. Archaeopteryx was the first
bird, descended from a dinosaur. What you eat doesn't make you one kind
of animal or another.
Q: Do you think T. rex was a predator or a scavenger?
A: Both is more likely. Big carnivores today, from lions on down, are
inefficient hunters and scavenge more often. Scavenging is more energy
efficient. There were huge herds of triceratops and duckbills in T.
rex's time, so plenty of ill, aged, young, and dead to feed upon without
much dangerous and draining hunting effort. Dr. Jack Horner and I wrote
a book all about T. rex, including this issue, for adults, called The
Complete T. rex which I think your kids would like (Simon & Schuster).
But I'm prejudiced. I wrote an article on this subject for Newsweek two
years ago as well. I deal with the quality of Bakker's science, and the
issues of extinction, warmbloodedness, and much of current dinosaur
research in a book I wrote three years ago called Dinosaurs Rediscovered
(Simon & Schuster). I hope you can find these.
Q: Were most dinosaurs plant-eaters or meat-eaters?
A: Most of the 335 kinds of dinosaurs ate plants, and about 100 kinds
ate meat. But in any place, there were far greater numbers of
plant-eaters than meat-eaters, just like today.
Q: Which dinosaurs were bigger plant-eaters or meat-eaters?
A: Plant-eaters by far. T. rex and giganotosaurus, the biggest
meat-eaters, were 7 or 8 tons and 45 feet long. The biggest plant eaters
were 100 tons and 110 feet long!
Q: How many pounds of eggs did the oviraptor eat in a day?
A: We don't know how many pounds of eggs oviraptor ate, since it didn't
leave a shopping receipt. Actually, we don't know if it even ate eggs.
Its name means "egg eater," but it was given that name because it was
found on top of a nest of eggs. Scientists back in the 1920s thought it
was eating those eggs. We found out recently when more oviraptors were
found, and one was straddling a nest of eggs, including an embryo, that
that oviraptor was there because the eggs were its own babies that it
was taking care of! Oviraptors have been found with lizard skeletons in
their stomach openings. So they probably ate lizards more than eggs. How
many lizards a day, I don't know.
Q: How do we know for sure which dinosaurs were plant-eaters and which
were meat-eaters?
A: All four-legged dinosaurs were plant-eaters. Some two-legged ones
were too. Beyond that, tooth shape is a good clue. Notched teeth were
meat-eater teeth.
Q: How did brachiosaurus get so big by eating plants and not meat?
A: Plant-eaters got far bigger than meat-eaters maybe because they
needed huge bellies to digest all that tough plant food. You can make a
good diet from vegetables, you know.
Q: What kind of foods did the dinosaurs eat?
A: Most dinosaurs ate plants, just like most animals today. But some ate
meat. We also guess that some ate insects and fruits. The plant-eaters
ate ferns and herbs and leaves from trees. Conifer-tree needles have
been found in the poop of duck-billed dinosaurs and around their stomach
cavities, so they probably nibbled on evergreens.
Q: How much food could a T-Rex eat in a day?
A: We can't be sure. Big meat-eaters today like lions eat a lot at one
time and then might not eat again for a week! T. rex could bite off 500
pounds in one bite! Maybe it ate a few hundred pounds of triceratops one
day and then didn't eat again for a while. We'll never know.
Q: How did the dinosaurs eat?
Why was the T. rex a carnivore?
A: Dinosaurs ate plants for the most part, because they were built to
chew and grind plants with their teeth or rocks in their stomachs.
Meat-eaters, like T. rex, had sharp, sawing teeth for cutting meat, so
they ate other dinosaurs, either dead or alive.
Q: Were there omnivorous dinosaurs?
A: Probably, but we don't have any proof. We find plants in the poop and
belly areas of some dinosaurs so we know that's what they ate, and
lizards in the belly area of others and tooth marks on dinosaur bone to
show us meat-eaters ate dinosaurs and reptiles. It's been speculated
that small meat-eaters with varied teeth, like troodon, were built to
eat a variety of foods. And toothless meat-eaters, such as the
ostrich-like ornithomimids, may have eaten eggs, or fruits, or insects
too. So odds are yes, but proof is lacking so far.
Q: Why did the sabertooth tiger want to eat the woolly mammoth?
A: Sabertooth tigers and woolly mammoths lived long after dinosaurs, so
I'm no expert on them. Sabertooths were meat-eaters and so woolly
mammoths might have been among their prey, I'd guess. Then again, woolly
mammoths were so big that maybe sabertooths didn't risk going after
them. Also, sabertooths had very narrow and long tusks. They might have
been better equipped for scavenging eating things already dead
then hunting.






