You probably know that around sixty-six million years ago an asteroid struck the earth and threw into chaos the entire world.
Debris filled the atmosphere and lowered temperatures dramatically, changing the ecosystem of the entire earth and turning the planet dark.
Due to the time it would have taken some dinosaur eggs to incubate and hatch, it now seems unlikely that a number of dinosaur species would have taken the time to migrate.
There's also the detail that since some eggs took so long to hatch, it would have been critical for dinosaur moms to find the perfect place to lay eggs – it's not like they could have picked them up and moved them. They would have had to find a place they could get back to and protect quickly and easily.
There are more dino-difficulties to recognize when you think about parents hanging out the eggs for so long. By staying in place for months on end, dinosaurs risked starvation, wily predators, and even natural disasters.
They would have been at a big disadvantage being tied to a specific area where they had laid their eggs. Maternal and paternal instincts run deep in lots of creatures, and keeping your children safe might have led some dinos to risk their own lives.
The number of changes this led to is practically innumerable. Scientists believe that already seventy-five percent of species living at the time died out due to the changing ecosystems, lack of light, and reduced air.
Those species that did survive probably did it by adapting their reproduction methods: species that were able to reproduce quickly ended up surviving and repopulating the earth. For example, the ancestors of modern-day birds developed shorter incubation periods, which not only made their unsafe egg periods shorter, but also allowed them to repopulate more quickly.
But dinosaurs, with their months-long incubation periods, didn't have much of a chance. Species such as the Hypacrosaurus and even the shorter-incubating Protoceratops would have had a much harder time incubating and repopulating.
In an FSU statement, Erickson said: “Our findings might have implications for understanding why dinosaurs went extinct at the end of the Cretaceous period. Whereas amphibians, birds, mammals, and other reptiles made it through and prospered.”