no
no they dont shed but sharks skin some times fall off in fights or stuff like that if its a sharks
Corn Snakes? Yes, all snakes shed their old skin.
ALL snakes (and lizards) shed their skin periodically. The general rule is - the younger the reptile - the more frequently they shed. Reptile skin is regenerated all at once - not in tiny flakes like human skin. Thus they have to shed their skin in order to grow.
ALL reptiles shed their skins... including Copperheads.
Earthworms are not insects. (Not all insects shed their skin.)
People shed their skin all the time - it's what house dust is primarily made of !
All reptiles shed their skin. Reptile skin doesn't 'stretch' like ours does. Instead, when the current skin gets too tight, they grow another one underneath. They shed (or slough) the old skin, and the new skin allows them to grow a little more.
Yes they do shed. They are like all reptiles and they have to shed their old skin every so oftern.
She's probably allergic to the pet dander. That's the tiny flakes of dead skin the animals shed.
Yes they do. Like all reptiles, turtles shed their skin. It is completely normal. It simply means they are healthy! :)
No, a fish's scales do not shed as the fish grows larger. Instead, the fish's scales grow in size as the fish grows. The scales provide protection for the fish and do not need to be shed like skin or fur.
Because humans shed skin all the time. You shed something like 5-10 grams of dead skin a week, and it's the main component of household dust.