Numerous extinct and prehistoric animals are hypothesized to have been primarily piscivorous due to anatomy and/or ecology. Furthermore, some have been confirmed to be piscivorous through fossil evidence. This list includes specialist piscivores, such as
Laganosuchus, as well as generalist predators, such as
Baryonyx and
Spinosaurus, found to have or assumed to have eaten fish:
Fish •
Diplomystus (a small
relative of the herring, numerous fossils of individuals that died while trying to swallow other fishes, including
smaller individuals of the same species, are known) •
Thyrsocles (fossil specimen found with the stomach stuffed with the extinct herring
Xyne grex) •
Xiphactinus (a 4-meter-long specimen was found with a perfectly preserved skeleton of its relative,
Gillicus, in its stomach)
Reptiles •
Baryonyx (an opportunistic predator that had a crocodile-like skull, and scales of the
lepidotid fish Scheenstia have been found in a skeleton where the stomach should be) •
Elasmosaurus (long neck, stereoscopically positioned eyes, and long teeth are thought to be adaptations for stalking and trapping fish and other schooling animals) •
Laganosuchus (flattened head suggests that it passively waited for fish to swim near its mouth in order to engulf them) •
Ornithocheirus (hypothesized to be piscivorous due to anatomy of its jaws and dentition) •
Pteranodon (remains of fish found in the beaks and stomach cavities of some specimens) •
Spinosaurus (close relative of
Baryonyx, is hypothesized to have preyed on fish because of giant
coelacanthids found in the same environment, and due to anatomical features, including a
pressure-sensitive snout that could have detected movements of swimming prey) •
Titanoboa (multiple cranial and biochemical characteristics suggest that it was primarily piscivorous) ==References==