YES
Sharks are constantly shedding and regrowing their teeth. Over a lifetime they can lose and grow up to 50,000 teeth.
Sharks loss there teeth bc when they bite flesh from there prey makes them get loss or fall of. Wich are then immediately replaced with another tooth.
Sharks have 5 or more rows of teeth. Humans only have 20 baby teeth and 32 adult teeth. Sharks can re-grow teeth. Humans only get 2 sets (milk teeth and permanent teeth). Sharks have serrated edges on their teeth. Shark teeth are not attached to the jaw. Humans bite and chew with their teeth. Sharks use their teeth to rip their prey apart.
Sharks have multiple rows of teeth in their jaws, with new teeth constantly growing and replacing old ones. This process ensures that the shark always has sharp and efficient teeth for hunting and feeding.
There is no way to count them. A shark's teeth are constantly growing and replacing any that are knocked out, so there's just no way to figure out how many they will have.
Sharks are constantly shedding and regrowing their teeth. Over a lifetime they can lose and grow up to 50,000 teeth.
how sharp is the hammerhaed sharks teeth
Sharks' teeth are attached to their gums, similar to how human teeth are attached. Sharks continuously shed and replace their teeth throughout their lifetime.
tiger sharks teeth are about 3inches long
yes white sharks have cutting edges and blue sharks have curved teeth
Sharks are born with a certain number of teeth. These are formed in spiral rows, with all but the tooth they are using folded flat. If one tooth gets knocked out, another one in the row will move into place. If the shark lost all of it's teeth, it would starve.
ALL SHARKS HAVE WHITE TEETH, WHEN THE TEETH FALL OUT AND GET OLDER THEY TURN BLACK