Yes, Narwhals can lose their teeth. Females tend to have both their teeth embedded in their jaws. Males tend to have frontwards projecting, long tusks growing out of one tooth. Sometimes, they have tusks growing out of both teeth. The tusks can break off.
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Somewhere around five months they lose their baby teeth.
Puppies lose all of their baby or milk teeth. As the adult teeth grow in the milk teeth should fall out. Sometimes both will be visible.
The Narwhals tooth , teeth are it's horn, it / they grow continuously through it's life. Depending where the horn was broken , some growth may still occur.
Kittens lose their deciduous teeth (baby/kitten teeth) at around 5 to 6 months of age, and the adult canine teeth grow in. Adult cats may lose these teeth due to injury or disease, and new teeth do not grow back.
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Basically, it's tusk is it's only tooth.
You will lose none because that is your last set of teeth and you better not lose them.
You are supposed to lose up to 20 teeth
you lose your teeth because new teeth are growing in and the new teeth push the current teeth and you have brand new healthy shiny teeth!
Tortoises never have any teeth to lose. They are born with horny beaks instead of teeth.
Blue Whales, Beluga Whales, Killer Whales, Sperm Whales, and Narwhals.
Narwhals breathe air so they are like land animals.
When our 12 and you start to lose lose all of your baby teeth and get buck teeth, and well...you start to get your second molars (ouch! painful)
Somewhere around five months they lose their baby teeth.
You can lose you firmly fixed teeth in a contact sport
They loose all of their teeth than they becom adults teeth idn how many though