No, they cannot chew. The teeth of a crocodile are designed for biting, gripping, or tearing their food. As with other reptiles, they swallow large sections of their prey, and it is digested without the need for pulverizing and grinding.
Crocodile teeth protrude out more than alligator teeth.
A crocodile has around 64 to 68 cone-shaped teeth.
No they dont. But there sharp
The alligator has a more rounded snout, and few if any teeth protrude when the mouth is closed. Crocodiles are usually the more aggressive species.
teeth
Actually, each time they eat, some of its teeth break or fall out.
Snakes and crocodiles because snakes and crocodiles are both reptiles but a frog is an amphibian.
No
They don't.
yes, crocodiles have more than 50 muscles in its face.
crocodiles have 64 teeth twice as many as we have
Yes, Alligators are more friendly to Humans than Crocodiles.
Crocodiles eat many more animals than humans regardless of their geographic location.
Because the replacement teeth grow inside the existing one.
Yes, but not very closely. Specifically, crocodiles and Liopleurodon are diapsid reptiles, but that is a very large grouping of animals indeed. To illustrate, crocodiles are more closely related to chickens than they are to Liopleurodon, on account of chickens being archosaurs, just as crocodiles are. Liopleurodon belongs to the pliosaurs, a group of extinct marine reptiles with relatively short necks. They are thought to be more closely related to lizards and snakes than to crocodiles. The external similarities between Liopleurodon and crocodiles (that long snout with a multitude of sharp teeth, for example) are due to convergent evolution, not a close evolutionary relationship. However, there did exist "marine crocodiles" that lived at about the same time as pliosaurs like Liopleurodon that were much more closely related to modern crocodiles, i.e. Thalattosuchians.