Though it must be frustrating in terms of getting people educated on the actual science on the the actual animals, since movies like Jurassic Park and its sequels play such a big part in the idea the general public has of dinosaurs, I think it's also kind of neat the franchise has basically made its own version of the Dilophosaurus and then just run with it. The frill and the spitting venom are completely made up traits (venom for the novel already, and the frill added for the movie). Yet it’s what the JP Dilos are best remembered for, often even referred to as simply “spitters”. The frill and the venom are still there in 2018 in JW Evolution, as are the same vocalizations heard in the first movie (and very briefly in the opening scene of Fallen Kingdom) as well as their being smaller than real Dilophosaurs would have been.
The one that killed Nedry looks even tinier, and I always kind of assumed that she might have been still a juvenile. Whether that is the case has rather conflicting evidence throughout the franchise.
Jurassic Park: The Game features four more Dilophosaurs - as in it features five including the one that killed Nedry - that are the same size, but the game takes place during and right after the events of the first movie, and at the time the park hadn’t been quite finished yet, so probably all the dinosaurs there are very young anyway. Rexy is a mere five years old at the time (which is young for an animal with a lifespan of 30-something years, though should be even younger in terms of developmental stage, since she's of a size that a T. rex is now considered not to have reached until its twenties or late teens - but, these creatures are modified clones, growth rates may vary.)
However, in Jurassic Park: The Game, the player also finds what look like one or two hatched dinosaur eggs near the place where Nedry got killed. According to InGen's 1994 cleanup report, there were only five Dilos brought to the island, and we see all five at the same time in the game, all of them tiny. Going by the location, it seems the most likely the eggs are Dilophosaurus eggs, although they are kind of big compared to their supposed parents. On the other hand, kiwi birds lay eggs absolutely huge for the adult bird's size, so could be InGen Dilos do, too. It's also not uncommon for a creature to be capable of reproducing before it's stopped growing in size, and there's fossil finds suggesting this was the case for some extinct dinosaurs, too. I'm not sure the Dilos in JP:TG look quite big enough compared to their possible full size that they would be sexually mature already, though.
If the eggs were laid and incubated where we find them, and they have hatched, Dilos are the only species of dinosaur that might have had access to the location for long enough (except for Compies, but it should be obvious the eggs are way too big to be theirs). It's still right next to a road, though, even if it doesn't get frequent traffic - is that a good location to nest in? Both the game and the clean-up report also show no signs of the hatched young, not even footprints around the egg shells (though fair enough, it's been raining). So were there even any hatchlings? Would two of the Dilos have perhaps had time after the fences' failing to wander far enough to raid some other theropod's nest and bring some of the snack they found to their own paddock to eat? Maybe those eggs aren't hatched at all. I guess we now have another Schrödinger's Gallimimus clutch.
What the characters later stumble upon, though, is clearly a nest, and a Dilophosaurus attacks them right after one of them steps on an egg, which is a pretty strong indication the Dilo is the eggs' parent. I'm not sure what part of the island exactly the scene takes place in (somewhere north of the Visitors Center) and if it could still be a different dinosaur's nest the Dilo was preying on instead of guarding.
JP:TG does also have a group of Herrerasaurus be on the island at the time of the Jurassic Park incident (and in the movie they were at least planned to be part of the park, too, but it's unclear if any had already been brought over), and the nest isn't too far from the Bone Shaker rollercoaster, which is apparently close to the Herrerasaurus paddock. The Herreras aren't fully grown or at least as big as their Mesozoic ancestors, either, though. But they're at least bigger than the Dilos, and more proportionate to the eggs' size. Maybe they're all Herrera eggs? The Dilophosaurus does abandon them after getting kicked by a human, but I guess there's nothing to say she would absolutely defend them with her life if they were hers.
According to an info screen in the protagonists' vehicle in The Lost World: Jurassic Park movie, the Dilos of JP movies can grow to be twenty feet long. The same measurement can also be found in the merch book InGen Field Guide, which does outright state the smaller individuals to be juveniles, with the length of twenty feet being an expected adult size none of the specimens have reached yet. The measurement of 20 feet long is also repeated at the Jurassic World holoscape, making that at least three sources stating that, two of them within the movies. The only complication there is that the holoscape also says there are currently no Dilos in Jurassic World, yet at the time of Fallen Kingdom at least one seems to be around, and for that individual to exist then, at least that one or its parents would have to have already existed on the island when the humans left and stopped cloning more species there. But InGen could also have just not wanted the public to know about their Dilos, which, like the raptors, were perhaps not used as a park attraction despite being on the island.
For visual appearances, the hologram in Jurassic World and the statue at Lockwood manor in Fallen Kingdom (which is indeed a sculpture and not a taxidermied real animal in-universe, as confirmed by the artist who created the dioramas for the movie) are bigger than the JP1 individual(s), though still not the size of a real Dilophosaurus adult. But it's hard to judge if they should be taken as accurate for the clones, either, since they're not the actual animals, and they might be life-sized replications, but they also might not be.
In the original JP novel, the Dilophosaurus that kills Nedry is the size of an actual adult Dilophosaurus. The book and movie versions of the story are very different, though, so something being canon in one doesn't mean it is in the other. We've also got a big Dilo in the movie's comic adaptation, however.
The comic and movie aren't 1:1, either, and not just in the Dilo's crests looking weird (which I could blame on the person who inked the comic being uninformed, the size of the animal is a bit more difficult to mistranslate from pencils by accident), so, there's that.
Another Jurassic Park comic, "Return to Jurassic Park", published by Topps in 1995, also features a Dilophosaurus bigger than the movie's. The comics in that series clash with the movie sequels quite a bit, though, and even with the first movie (highlights include Robert Muldoon somehow having survived, and Dr. Ellie Sattler befriending a Velociraptor), so not very strong evidence there.
To thicken the plot of the prehistoric chickens further, concept art for the webseries Jurassic World: Regenesis features a pair of small Dilos in the same picture with a big one, clearly implying the small ones are juveniles.
JW:R was cancelled before it ever launched, so its canonity is even more debatable than non-movie JP/W media's in general, but it was going to be an official part of the franchise under the Jurassic World title, so properly big Dilos aren't just something left in the past entirely.
On the other hand, of the JW media that has been published and very recent at that, Dilos being as small as they are in Jurassic World Evolution would hint at the InGen Dilophosaurus still being that small as an adult despite the other information to the contrary, since all the other species are shown only as adults, and the Dilos will still be that size when they die of old age. But JWE is an AU as well, where Claire Dearing is somehow still involved in running a dinosaur theme park even with her Fallen Kingdom-era attitude towards the animals, Indoraptors are potentially kept in said theme park, and Jurassic World extends to Isla Nublar's neighboring islands, too (and Nublar at all, for that matter, which is still habitable and Mt. Sibo still dormant despite enough time having passed from the Indoraptor prototype's creation that the species now has a version tweaked to be un-uncannyvalley enough to be kept as a tourist attraction). And it's also a video game that got features such as day-night cycles, dinosaurs sleeping, and fish feeders for piscivorous species as later updates as opposed to at its initial release. Who knows, maybe growth stages for the dinosaurs is a thing that's still coming, too.
So, InGen Dilophosaurus, big or small? I don't know, maybe there isn't even supposed to be one version of it throughout its appearances at all, like the raptors keep getting tweaked in-universe, too. The JWE Dilo could be a variation that can only grow to that size, the Dilos appearing elsewhere might grow to be bigger. Or perhaps since we never actually see these 20 feet long Dilos in hard canon, maybe it's indeed an expected adult size, but turns out the clones just can't grow that big after all, like they don't in JWE.
The JP1 Dilophosaurus isn't big enough to be fully grown in any case, unless JP:TG is enough its own AU that in that game, specifically, the Dilos only get that big. Every depiction not set in the days the Jurassic Park movie's events take place in is bigger. Still leaves up for interpretation just how much of a baby she is, depending on how big her variation gets at fully grown. If not much bigger, I guess the JP:TG/JP1 individuals could be old enough to reproduce despite still growing. If to the size of a real adult Dilo, then probably not.
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