About 3000 teeth
Many teeth fall out each time a shark bites., so in a lifetime sharks have about 2000 teeth. But I think the megaladon has about as much as the great white does, only much bigger. (at a time).
Naturally you would think the great white would win but hippo's are much more powerful then they come on. Sharks may have sharper teeth and people may be more afraid for them but hippo's weigh more then sharks do and when they get there teeth in you there not letting go. Sharks do the same thing though, there jaw cant open till there teeth have fully closed and that's the same with horses. Anywho the answer is hippo's, they would win against a great white.
Adult Great Whites are apex predators. Apart from the Orca (Killer Whale), there are no known predators that may attack or kill a Great White. In regions where both the Orca and the Great whites inhabit and compete for food, Orcas may attack and kill these sharks. Since Orca's are much larger than them, they can attack and even kill great whites.
alot
They usually replace the teeth instead of losing them. But usually the teeth are replaced every two weeks. A lemon shark replaces its teeth every 8-10 days. Young great white sharks replace there teeth every 100 days and old great white sharks replace their teeth every 230 days. The cookiecutter shark sheds the whole lower jaw at once.
100 ft long
great whites eat seals and little sharks
Great White Sharks are good predators of sea otters because the sharks are quiet and sneaky and the sea otter don't usually pay much attention to what is going on.
Aside from humans, the Great White Shark has been recorded several times falling prey to the Orca Killer Whale. Orca attacks are rare, and the Great White has no effective defense against the much more intelligent Orca.
yes
An internet search found one site with fossilized great white shark teeth They can vary in size, but all the ones depicted were under one ounce (less than 28 grams) in weight. ______ They will have about 50 teeth at one time that they are using, but sharks have backup teeth that come in after only about a day, so with the backup teeth they might have hundreds. A shark can go through over 30,000 teeth over the course of their lives.
2000 to 3000 lbs, is how much a shark weighs