All birds of prey eat a strictly carnivorous diet.
Its carnivorous diet may have consisted of worms, fish, or other arthropods.
They have a mostly carnivorous diet and their breeding is timed with the rainy season.
The 42 teeth of a polar bear reflect its highly carnivorous diet.
They are mostly omnivorous in their adult life, except the green sea turtle which is herbivorous, changing from a carnivorous diet when young.
More intriguing would be a study of vegetarian versus carnivorous diets and their effects on criminal behavior.
Some eat other animals - this is a carnivorous diet (and includes insectivorous diets).
A highly carnivorous diet remains a part of Pākehā culture, although red meat consumption has dropped in the last few decades.
The available teeth for Staurikosaurus bare a morphology that strongly suggests a carnivorous diet.
Now, while they still enjoy a carnivorous diet, their food is served pre-killed and at blood temperatures.