Now that you've heard about the floral environment in which the Ceratopsians lived, you may ask, what did they eat?
Again
this is a matter of debate. Ceratopsians consumed large quantities of
greenery, that is known. As to exactly what that was, is debated
because of their unusual method of chewing.
Rather
than having grinding tooth planes, adapted for chewing quantities of
resistant plant material for their prolonged lifespan, Ceratopsian
dentitions were dominated by a scissor-like shearing action (Dodson,
1996).
The jaws slid past one another, and as a consequence of the
angulation of the teeth, only a single tooth in each position was in
wear (Dodson, 1996).
Both
modern and fossil herbivores have exhibited some degree of shear in
their dentition, however, in no other case has shear completely
dominated over crushing and grinding (Dodson, 1996). Consequently,
there are a couple of different theories as to the content of the
Ceratopsian diet.
One
interpretation is that the Ceratopsids consumed fleshy fruits that
required very little effort to chew.
Another
view is that they ate food that required extensive effort to chew,
possibly a food that was inaccessible to other animals lacking in
such teeth and jaws (Dodson, 1996). The suggestion was that they ate
fibrous palm and cycad fronds.
Unfortunately,
much like the gait debate, neither arguement is
conclusive.