Humpback Whales don't have teeth. They just swallow everything they eat.
Jaws are important to help keep our bodies together and to help us chew our food
Jaws and teeth chew food.
The function of the grasshopper's strong jaws is to chew tough plant material. The mouth is able chew large amounts of plant material.
No both jaws on the fish are not equally movable, only the lower jaw (mandible) is movable to chew food
Jaws are important to help keep our bodies together and to help us chew our food
Of course they do. All creatures that chew their food before digestion have jaws and teeth, capable of biting and grinding so it can be swallowed without choking.
The jaws of the panda are very strong and are used to chew on their favorite food bamboo. Their teeth are not sharp but flat so that they can crush the bamboo.
green sea turtles do not have the ability to move their jaws laterally, so they can't chew the way that mammals can :) hope it helps
Their teeth. Baleen whales such as humpbacks have brush-like baleens to filter plankton, and toothed whales like dolphins and killer whales (but also the sperm whale) have teeth to catch fish.
A grasshopper's mouth parts are called clypeus, labrum, and palpi. They use mandibles to chew and jaws to crush their food.
The mouth parts and jaws of a grasshopper must be strong. This is to allow the grasshopper to chew its food and break down plants that make up their diet.
One animal that chews its food with its legs is the horseshoe crab. It does not have teeth or jaws, so it uses its legs to "chew" the food, which then goes into its beak.