Dinosaur senses
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Both plant-eating and meat-eating dinosaurs needed their senses to find food. How do you search for tasty plants to eat while remaining aware of any stalking predators? How do you find your plant-eating prey when they may be camouflaged or in hiding? Which senses would be most helpful to different kinds of dinosaurs?
Herbivore senses
Sight:
- eyes were on the sides of the head for a wide view of surroundings
- vision was probably in colour like birds and most living reptiles
Smell:
- olfactory lobes (part of the brain responsible for the sense of smell) were enlarged in some, indicating smell was an important sense
- sense of smell was used to find plants or detect predators or possible mates
Hearing:
- small plant-eaters probably heard higher frequencies, which was useful for pinpointing the location of a predator and warning calls from other dinosaurs
- large plant-eaters probably heard lower frequencies, which was useful for communicating over long distances
- external ears would have been similar in appearance to those of living birds and reptiles
Carnivore senses
Sight:
- some had relatively big, forward-facing eyes used to judge distances to prey
- vision was probably in colour like birds and most living reptiles
Smell:
- olfactory lobes (part of the brain responsible for the sense of smell) were enlarged in some, indicating smell was an important sense
- sense of smell was used to find prey and detect predators or possible mates
Hearing:
- external ears would have been similar in appearance to those of living birds and reptiles
- structure and large size of middle ear cavities suggests some theropods heard low frequency sounds, useful for detecting far-off prey
How did the sight of a meat-eating dinosaur differ from that of a plant-eating dinosaur?
- Theropods generally had forward-facing eyes. This resulted in a relatively wide range of binocular vision (the eyes work together to produce one image) in front and a narrow range of monocular vision to the sides. They may also have had stereoscopic vision which means their eyes judged exact distances to objects or prey (known as depth perception).
- Most plant-eating dinosaurs had eyes on the sides of their heads. This resulted in a wide range of monocular vision (the eyes work independently to produce two separate images) and a very narrow range of binocular vision in front.