Modern flamingoes employ filter feeding and their feces are, as a result, rich in remains of microscopically-small aquatic prey. Very similar contents are described from more than 150 million year old ...
During the dinosaur era, pterosaurs would swoop down and snap up wriggly fish and buzzing insects with their spiky teeth, with the exception of one odd group — pterosaurs that ate their meals like ...
The flamingo is well-known for its habit of eating with its head upside-down. This behaviour is largely due to the structure of its mouth and the logistics of lowering its long, graceful neck into the ...
A never-before-seen species of pterosaur had hundreds of hooked teeth that helped it filter its food in a similar way to living flamingos. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an ...
It definitely did not walk like a duck, and it probably did not quack like one, but a bird-like Mongolian dinosaur called Gallimimus probably ate like a duck, filtering water through a sieve-like ...
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