Ceratosuchops

[3] A 2023 study by Barker and colleagues based on CT scans of the braincases of Ceratosuchops and Baryonyx found that the brain anatomy of these baryonychines was similar to that of other non-maniraptoriform theropods.

Their neurosensory capabilities such as hearing and olfaction (sense of smell) were unexceptional, and their gaze stabilisation less developed than those of spinosaurines, so their behavioural adaptations were probably comparable to those of other large-bodied terrestrial theropods.

[7][8][9] Other dinosaurs from the Wessex Formation of the Isle of Wight include the theropods Riparovenator, Neovenator, Eotyrannus, Aristosuchus, Thecocoelurus, Calamospondylus, and Ornithodesmus, the ornithopods Iguanodon, Hypsilophodon, and Valdosaurus, the sauropods Ornithopsis, Eucamerotus, and Chondrosteosaurus, and the ankylosaur Polacanthus.

[10][1] Barker and colleagues stated in 2021 that the identification of the two additional spinosaurids from the Wealden Supergroup, Riparovenator and Ceratosuchops, has implications for potential ecological separation within Spinosauridae if these and Baryonyx were contemporary and interacted.

[1] It is generally thought that large predators occur with small taxonomic diversity in any area due to ecological demands, yet many Mesozoic assemblages include two or more sympatric theropods that were comparable in size and morphology, and this also appears to have been the case for spinosaurids.

Known material of Ceratosuchops (rear) and Riparovenator (front) diagrams by Dan Folkes