How did the mosasaurus stay alive?





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11















In Jurassic World, we meet a mosasaurus. We see it again in Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom.



Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, Mosasaurus



At the start of the film, it's still in its enclosure. How did it survive all that time? While it was fed daily when the park was operating, and it had an Indominus Rex carcass to feed on, it was left alone for a couple of years.



How did it survive?










share|improve this question























  • It's worth noting that the opening of Fallen Kingdom takes weeks or a month, rather than 2 years, after the end of the first film. [Jurassic World Fallen Kingdom Spoiler Special ft. J.A. Bayona & Colin Trevorrow]soundcloud.com/empiremagazine/…)

    – Longshanks
    Jan 15 at 12:23











  • @Longshanks is that so? I recall the submarine not worrying about anything large being left alive in the bay. Hm... worth a question.

    – SQB
    Jan 15 at 14:41











  • Yeah, he went on to say, “The opening sequence is set just after [Jurassic World]. There’s three years that pass [between the events of JW and the events after the opening of JW:FK]. We didn’t put that type up onto the screen, but the opening scene could even be weeks after or a month after, and then time passes to allow them to create [the Indoraptor]”

    – Longshanks
    Jan 15 at 14:47






  • 1





    @Longshanks You may want to put that into an answer here.

    – TheLethalCarrot
    Jan 15 at 14:51


















11















In Jurassic World, we meet a mosasaurus. We see it again in Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom.



Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, Mosasaurus



At the start of the film, it's still in its enclosure. How did it survive all that time? While it was fed daily when the park was operating, and it had an Indominus Rex carcass to feed on, it was left alone for a couple of years.



How did it survive?










share|improve this question























  • It's worth noting that the opening of Fallen Kingdom takes weeks or a month, rather than 2 years, after the end of the first film. [Jurassic World Fallen Kingdom Spoiler Special ft. J.A. Bayona & Colin Trevorrow]soundcloud.com/empiremagazine/…)

    – Longshanks
    Jan 15 at 12:23











  • @Longshanks is that so? I recall the submarine not worrying about anything large being left alive in the bay. Hm... worth a question.

    – SQB
    Jan 15 at 14:41











  • Yeah, he went on to say, “The opening sequence is set just after [Jurassic World]. There’s three years that pass [between the events of JW and the events after the opening of JW:FK]. We didn’t put that type up onto the screen, but the opening scene could even be weeks after or a month after, and then time passes to allow them to create [the Indoraptor]”

    – Longshanks
    Jan 15 at 14:47






  • 1





    @Longshanks You may want to put that into an answer here.

    – TheLethalCarrot
    Jan 15 at 14:51














11












11








11


1






In Jurassic World, we meet a mosasaurus. We see it again in Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom.



Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, Mosasaurus



At the start of the film, it's still in its enclosure. How did it survive all that time? While it was fed daily when the park was operating, and it had an Indominus Rex carcass to feed on, it was left alone for a couple of years.



How did it survive?










share|improve this question














In Jurassic World, we meet a mosasaurus. We see it again in Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom.



Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, Mosasaurus



At the start of the film, it's still in its enclosure. How did it survive all that time? While it was fed daily when the park was operating, and it had an Indominus Rex carcass to feed on, it was left alone for a couple of years.



How did it survive?







jurassic-park jurassic-world jurassic-world-fallen-kingdom






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jun 11 '18 at 18:06









SQBSQB

25.5k25145243




25.5k25145243













  • It's worth noting that the opening of Fallen Kingdom takes weeks or a month, rather than 2 years, after the end of the first film. [Jurassic World Fallen Kingdom Spoiler Special ft. J.A. Bayona & Colin Trevorrow]soundcloud.com/empiremagazine/…)

    – Longshanks
    Jan 15 at 12:23











  • @Longshanks is that so? I recall the submarine not worrying about anything large being left alive in the bay. Hm... worth a question.

    – SQB
    Jan 15 at 14:41











  • Yeah, he went on to say, “The opening sequence is set just after [Jurassic World]. There’s three years that pass [between the events of JW and the events after the opening of JW:FK]. We didn’t put that type up onto the screen, but the opening scene could even be weeks after or a month after, and then time passes to allow them to create [the Indoraptor]”

    – Longshanks
    Jan 15 at 14:47






  • 1





    @Longshanks You may want to put that into an answer here.

    – TheLethalCarrot
    Jan 15 at 14:51



















  • It's worth noting that the opening of Fallen Kingdom takes weeks or a month, rather than 2 years, after the end of the first film. [Jurassic World Fallen Kingdom Spoiler Special ft. J.A. Bayona & Colin Trevorrow]soundcloud.com/empiremagazine/…)

    – Longshanks
    Jan 15 at 12:23











  • @Longshanks is that so? I recall the submarine not worrying about anything large being left alive in the bay. Hm... worth a question.

    – SQB
    Jan 15 at 14:41











  • Yeah, he went on to say, “The opening sequence is set just after [Jurassic World]. There’s three years that pass [between the events of JW and the events after the opening of JW:FK]. We didn’t put that type up onto the screen, but the opening scene could even be weeks after or a month after, and then time passes to allow them to create [the Indoraptor]”

    – Longshanks
    Jan 15 at 14:47






  • 1





    @Longshanks You may want to put that into an answer here.

    – TheLethalCarrot
    Jan 15 at 14:51

















It's worth noting that the opening of Fallen Kingdom takes weeks or a month, rather than 2 years, after the end of the first film. [Jurassic World Fallen Kingdom Spoiler Special ft. J.A. Bayona & Colin Trevorrow]soundcloud.com/empiremagazine/…)

– Longshanks
Jan 15 at 12:23





It's worth noting that the opening of Fallen Kingdom takes weeks or a month, rather than 2 years, after the end of the first film. [Jurassic World Fallen Kingdom Spoiler Special ft. J.A. Bayona & Colin Trevorrow]soundcloud.com/empiremagazine/…)

– Longshanks
Jan 15 at 12:23













@Longshanks is that so? I recall the submarine not worrying about anything large being left alive in the bay. Hm... worth a question.

– SQB
Jan 15 at 14:41





@Longshanks is that so? I recall the submarine not worrying about anything large being left alive in the bay. Hm... worth a question.

– SQB
Jan 15 at 14:41













Yeah, he went on to say, “The opening sequence is set just after [Jurassic World]. There’s three years that pass [between the events of JW and the events after the opening of JW:FK]. We didn’t put that type up onto the screen, but the opening scene could even be weeks after or a month after, and then time passes to allow them to create [the Indoraptor]”

– Longshanks
Jan 15 at 14:47





Yeah, he went on to say, “The opening sequence is set just after [Jurassic World]. There’s three years that pass [between the events of JW and the events after the opening of JW:FK]. We didn’t put that type up onto the screen, but the opening scene could even be weeks after or a month after, and then time passes to allow them to create [the Indoraptor]”

– Longshanks
Jan 15 at 14:47




1




1





@Longshanks You may want to put that into an answer here.

– TheLethalCarrot
Jan 15 at 14:51





@Longshanks You may want to put that into an answer here.

– TheLethalCarrot
Jan 15 at 14:51










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















11














In the film Jurassic World we see the mosasaurus jump out of the water to catch a pteranodon as well as beaching itself to catch the i-Rex™.



Presumably it can simply keep doing that whenever it gets hungry. There's apparently no shortage of dinos (both flying and non) left on the island at the end of the film.










Colin Trevorow seems to have confirmed this idea in a podcast interview with Empire Magazine




Empire: The mosasaurus. I have to ask, what has it been eating, because this movie is set like four or five years….



CT: Well, but the opening sequence is set just after, there’s three years that pass. We didn’t put that type up onto the screen but the opening sequence could even be weeks after or a few months after. And then time passes to allow them to create that creature



Empire: I was trying to work out if the mosasaurus was jumping up and eating birds...



CT: Probably some. I think if some nesting pteranadons were on the water and if an animal came down to drink and didn’t realise it was salt-water, they’re in trouble



Jurassic World Fallen Kingdom Spoiler Special ft. J.A. Bayona & Colin Trevorrow







share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    One would expect the water to become quite foul after the pumps and filtration system shut down or broke.

    – Xantec
    Jun 11 '18 at 19:00











  • @Xantec - Given that it's an island you'd expect the influx and outflux to be tidal. Just a big tube that runs from a (the sea) to b (the enclosure) with an enormous grate to stop the exhibit from escaping

    – Valorum
    Jun 11 '18 at 19:03













  • Could do that I suppose. I wonder how long it would remain a viable filtration system, before the grate became too clogged.

    – Xantec
    Jun 11 '18 at 19:37











  • @Xantec - Assuming the grate had a big enough diameter, almost indefinitely.

    – Valorum
    Jun 11 '18 at 19:42






  • 1





    @Longshanks - Nice. I've added a transcript of the podcast and a link. Great find.

    – Valorum
    Jan 15 at 20:11



















3














I've raised mega predators and an animal such as the alligator gar can actually go about two and a half years without eating before it will finally die.



I had an animal shelter and individuals that wanted to see it shut down kill the power and many of the animals. Death the alligator gar was one that survived but the trauma of the event was enough that it never ate again I made several attempts over two and a half years and I think it may have consumed once or twice a small meal but essentially went without eating for two and a half years.
I have a ball python that refuse to eat for 10 months and then suddenly started to feed again normally.
And I've heard of large snakes and crocodilians going over a year for an animal as massive as the mosasaurus I would think that you're probably talking about years pending that nothing exhausted its energy reserves.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Ellory Dahl is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















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    2 Answers
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    active

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    2 Answers
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    11














    In the film Jurassic World we see the mosasaurus jump out of the water to catch a pteranodon as well as beaching itself to catch the i-Rex™.



    Presumably it can simply keep doing that whenever it gets hungry. There's apparently no shortage of dinos (both flying and non) left on the island at the end of the film.










    Colin Trevorow seems to have confirmed this idea in a podcast interview with Empire Magazine




    Empire: The mosasaurus. I have to ask, what has it been eating, because this movie is set like four or five years….



    CT: Well, but the opening sequence is set just after, there’s three years that pass. We didn’t put that type up onto the screen but the opening sequence could even be weeks after or a few months after. And then time passes to allow them to create that creature



    Empire: I was trying to work out if the mosasaurus was jumping up and eating birds...



    CT: Probably some. I think if some nesting pteranadons were on the water and if an animal came down to drink and didn’t realise it was salt-water, they’re in trouble



    Jurassic World Fallen Kingdom Spoiler Special ft. J.A. Bayona & Colin Trevorrow







    share|improve this answer





















    • 1





      One would expect the water to become quite foul after the pumps and filtration system shut down or broke.

      – Xantec
      Jun 11 '18 at 19:00











    • @Xantec - Given that it's an island you'd expect the influx and outflux to be tidal. Just a big tube that runs from a (the sea) to b (the enclosure) with an enormous grate to stop the exhibit from escaping

      – Valorum
      Jun 11 '18 at 19:03













    • Could do that I suppose. I wonder how long it would remain a viable filtration system, before the grate became too clogged.

      – Xantec
      Jun 11 '18 at 19:37











    • @Xantec - Assuming the grate had a big enough diameter, almost indefinitely.

      – Valorum
      Jun 11 '18 at 19:42






    • 1





      @Longshanks - Nice. I've added a transcript of the podcast and a link. Great find.

      – Valorum
      Jan 15 at 20:11
















    11














    In the film Jurassic World we see the mosasaurus jump out of the water to catch a pteranodon as well as beaching itself to catch the i-Rex™.



    Presumably it can simply keep doing that whenever it gets hungry. There's apparently no shortage of dinos (both flying and non) left on the island at the end of the film.










    Colin Trevorow seems to have confirmed this idea in a podcast interview with Empire Magazine




    Empire: The mosasaurus. I have to ask, what has it been eating, because this movie is set like four or five years….



    CT: Well, but the opening sequence is set just after, there’s three years that pass. We didn’t put that type up onto the screen but the opening sequence could even be weeks after or a few months after. And then time passes to allow them to create that creature



    Empire: I was trying to work out if the mosasaurus was jumping up and eating birds...



    CT: Probably some. I think if some nesting pteranadons were on the water and if an animal came down to drink and didn’t realise it was salt-water, they’re in trouble



    Jurassic World Fallen Kingdom Spoiler Special ft. J.A. Bayona & Colin Trevorrow







    share|improve this answer





















    • 1





      One would expect the water to become quite foul after the pumps and filtration system shut down or broke.

      – Xantec
      Jun 11 '18 at 19:00











    • @Xantec - Given that it's an island you'd expect the influx and outflux to be tidal. Just a big tube that runs from a (the sea) to b (the enclosure) with an enormous grate to stop the exhibit from escaping

      – Valorum
      Jun 11 '18 at 19:03













    • Could do that I suppose. I wonder how long it would remain a viable filtration system, before the grate became too clogged.

      – Xantec
      Jun 11 '18 at 19:37











    • @Xantec - Assuming the grate had a big enough diameter, almost indefinitely.

      – Valorum
      Jun 11 '18 at 19:42






    • 1





      @Longshanks - Nice. I've added a transcript of the podcast and a link. Great find.

      – Valorum
      Jan 15 at 20:11














    11












    11








    11







    In the film Jurassic World we see the mosasaurus jump out of the water to catch a pteranodon as well as beaching itself to catch the i-Rex™.



    Presumably it can simply keep doing that whenever it gets hungry. There's apparently no shortage of dinos (both flying and non) left on the island at the end of the film.










    Colin Trevorow seems to have confirmed this idea in a podcast interview with Empire Magazine




    Empire: The mosasaurus. I have to ask, what has it been eating, because this movie is set like four or five years….



    CT: Well, but the opening sequence is set just after, there’s three years that pass. We didn’t put that type up onto the screen but the opening sequence could even be weeks after or a few months after. And then time passes to allow them to create that creature



    Empire: I was trying to work out if the mosasaurus was jumping up and eating birds...



    CT: Probably some. I think if some nesting pteranadons were on the water and if an animal came down to drink and didn’t realise it was salt-water, they’re in trouble



    Jurassic World Fallen Kingdom Spoiler Special ft. J.A. Bayona & Colin Trevorrow







    share|improve this answer















    In the film Jurassic World we see the mosasaurus jump out of the water to catch a pteranodon as well as beaching itself to catch the i-Rex™.



    Presumably it can simply keep doing that whenever it gets hungry. There's apparently no shortage of dinos (both flying and non) left on the island at the end of the film.










    Colin Trevorow seems to have confirmed this idea in a podcast interview with Empire Magazine




    Empire: The mosasaurus. I have to ask, what has it been eating, because this movie is set like four or five years….



    CT: Well, but the opening sequence is set just after, there’s three years that pass. We didn’t put that type up onto the screen but the opening sequence could even be weeks after or a few months after. And then time passes to allow them to create that creature



    Empire: I was trying to work out if the mosasaurus was jumping up and eating birds...



    CT: Probably some. I think if some nesting pteranadons were on the water and if an animal came down to drink and didn’t realise it was salt-water, they’re in trouble



    Jurassic World Fallen Kingdom Spoiler Special ft. J.A. Bayona & Colin Trevorrow
















    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Jan 15 at 20:10

























    answered Jun 11 '18 at 18:53









    ValorumValorum

    413k11230113234




    413k11230113234








    • 1





      One would expect the water to become quite foul after the pumps and filtration system shut down or broke.

      – Xantec
      Jun 11 '18 at 19:00











    • @Xantec - Given that it's an island you'd expect the influx and outflux to be tidal. Just a big tube that runs from a (the sea) to b (the enclosure) with an enormous grate to stop the exhibit from escaping

      – Valorum
      Jun 11 '18 at 19:03













    • Could do that I suppose. I wonder how long it would remain a viable filtration system, before the grate became too clogged.

      – Xantec
      Jun 11 '18 at 19:37











    • @Xantec - Assuming the grate had a big enough diameter, almost indefinitely.

      – Valorum
      Jun 11 '18 at 19:42






    • 1





      @Longshanks - Nice. I've added a transcript of the podcast and a link. Great find.

      – Valorum
      Jan 15 at 20:11














    • 1





      One would expect the water to become quite foul after the pumps and filtration system shut down or broke.

      – Xantec
      Jun 11 '18 at 19:00











    • @Xantec - Given that it's an island you'd expect the influx and outflux to be tidal. Just a big tube that runs from a (the sea) to b (the enclosure) with an enormous grate to stop the exhibit from escaping

      – Valorum
      Jun 11 '18 at 19:03













    • Could do that I suppose. I wonder how long it would remain a viable filtration system, before the grate became too clogged.

      – Xantec
      Jun 11 '18 at 19:37











    • @Xantec - Assuming the grate had a big enough diameter, almost indefinitely.

      – Valorum
      Jun 11 '18 at 19:42






    • 1





      @Longshanks - Nice. I've added a transcript of the podcast and a link. Great find.

      – Valorum
      Jan 15 at 20:11








    1




    1





    One would expect the water to become quite foul after the pumps and filtration system shut down or broke.

    – Xantec
    Jun 11 '18 at 19:00





    One would expect the water to become quite foul after the pumps and filtration system shut down or broke.

    – Xantec
    Jun 11 '18 at 19:00













    @Xantec - Given that it's an island you'd expect the influx and outflux to be tidal. Just a big tube that runs from a (the sea) to b (the enclosure) with an enormous grate to stop the exhibit from escaping

    – Valorum
    Jun 11 '18 at 19:03







    @Xantec - Given that it's an island you'd expect the influx and outflux to be tidal. Just a big tube that runs from a (the sea) to b (the enclosure) with an enormous grate to stop the exhibit from escaping

    – Valorum
    Jun 11 '18 at 19:03















    Could do that I suppose. I wonder how long it would remain a viable filtration system, before the grate became too clogged.

    – Xantec
    Jun 11 '18 at 19:37





    Could do that I suppose. I wonder how long it would remain a viable filtration system, before the grate became too clogged.

    – Xantec
    Jun 11 '18 at 19:37













    @Xantec - Assuming the grate had a big enough diameter, almost indefinitely.

    – Valorum
    Jun 11 '18 at 19:42





    @Xantec - Assuming the grate had a big enough diameter, almost indefinitely.

    – Valorum
    Jun 11 '18 at 19:42




    1




    1





    @Longshanks - Nice. I've added a transcript of the podcast and a link. Great find.

    – Valorum
    Jan 15 at 20:11





    @Longshanks - Nice. I've added a transcript of the podcast and a link. Great find.

    – Valorum
    Jan 15 at 20:11













    3














    I've raised mega predators and an animal such as the alligator gar can actually go about two and a half years without eating before it will finally die.



    I had an animal shelter and individuals that wanted to see it shut down kill the power and many of the animals. Death the alligator gar was one that survived but the trauma of the event was enough that it never ate again I made several attempts over two and a half years and I think it may have consumed once or twice a small meal but essentially went without eating for two and a half years.
    I have a ball python that refuse to eat for 10 months and then suddenly started to feed again normally.
    And I've heard of large snakes and crocodilians going over a year for an animal as massive as the mosasaurus I would think that you're probably talking about years pending that nothing exhausted its energy reserves.






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    Ellory Dahl is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.

























      3














      I've raised mega predators and an animal such as the alligator gar can actually go about two and a half years without eating before it will finally die.



      I had an animal shelter and individuals that wanted to see it shut down kill the power and many of the animals. Death the alligator gar was one that survived but the trauma of the event was enough that it never ate again I made several attempts over two and a half years and I think it may have consumed once or twice a small meal but essentially went without eating for two and a half years.
      I have a ball python that refuse to eat for 10 months and then suddenly started to feed again normally.
      And I've heard of large snakes and crocodilians going over a year for an animal as massive as the mosasaurus I would think that you're probably talking about years pending that nothing exhausted its energy reserves.






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      Ellory Dahl is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.























        3












        3








        3







        I've raised mega predators and an animal such as the alligator gar can actually go about two and a half years without eating before it will finally die.



        I had an animal shelter and individuals that wanted to see it shut down kill the power and many of the animals. Death the alligator gar was one that survived but the trauma of the event was enough that it never ate again I made several attempts over two and a half years and I think it may have consumed once or twice a small meal but essentially went without eating for two and a half years.
        I have a ball python that refuse to eat for 10 months and then suddenly started to feed again normally.
        And I've heard of large snakes and crocodilians going over a year for an animal as massive as the mosasaurus I would think that you're probably talking about years pending that nothing exhausted its energy reserves.






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        Ellory Dahl is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.










        I've raised mega predators and an animal such as the alligator gar can actually go about two and a half years without eating before it will finally die.



        I had an animal shelter and individuals that wanted to see it shut down kill the power and many of the animals. Death the alligator gar was one that survived but the trauma of the event was enough that it never ate again I made several attempts over two and a half years and I think it may have consumed once or twice a small meal but essentially went without eating for two and a half years.
        I have a ball python that refuse to eat for 10 months and then suddenly started to feed again normally.
        And I've heard of large snakes and crocodilians going over a year for an animal as massive as the mosasaurus I would think that you're probably talking about years pending that nothing exhausted its energy reserves.







        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        Ellory Dahl is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer






        New contributor




        Ellory Dahl is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        answered 8 hours ago









        Ellory DahlEllory Dahl

        311




        311




        New contributor




        Ellory Dahl is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.





        New contributor





        Ellory Dahl is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.






        Ellory Dahl is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.






























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