No, insects are generally not thought of as having teeth.
No insect has teeth.
There is not an insect known as the tooth insect. If you have an insect stuck in your teeth you can use dental floss to remove it and washing your mouth out with warm salt water.
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Spiders, grasshoppers, beetles, and etc.
Most of them have dentures made especially for butterflies by and insect dentist.
Yes!Salamanders do have teeth- but not for chewing, they have teeth kind of like a snakes, its to hold the food in their mouth so it cant get away.Salamanders teeth face backwards.
A bat's teeth are typically small and sharp, designed for biting and tearing through insect exoskeletons or fruit. They are not as large or prominent as the teeth of carnivorous mammals like big cats or dogs.
no there are simply no teeth wat so ever at the bottom of the mouth of the frog. There iz teeth on the top of the frogs mouth but it is completely useless since they use there eye balls to swallow their food.:)
Many would say that a platypus's mouth is like a beak of a duck. It is rather different, with its bill being broader and flatter than a duck's beak. Inside the platypus's mouth are grinding plates, instead of teeth, with which the platypus grinds its food.
insect
We describe an insect's body as head, thorax and abdomen. That means something like "head, chest and belly".In much the same way as humans, crocodiles, and dogs are built, the chest or "thorax" of an insect is between the belly and the head.In fact, the word "thorax" applies to the human body as well; we speak of thoracic surgery, the thoracic cavity, and thoracic vertebrae for example.
Young bats (pups) do. Microchiroptera (small insect eating bats, not fruit bats) are able to fly and eat within around 4-6 weeks.