Yes, all bass have tiny, bristle like teeth.
Of a sort. They are projections that are more like bristles than teeth.
Yes, they sometimes eat tadpoles.
A big largemouth would eat a smaller fish of any species.
Both large and smallmouth bass will eat clams. Usually the will eat the when the clams are "on the move". The clams will expose themselves when they move and bass will bite off the exposed clam. The smallmouth bass is the only freshwater bass with an upper jaw plate designed for cracking the shell of the clam. We have studied bass since 1976 and have recorded clam in stomachs and fecies of both large and smallmouth bass quite regualarly.
Bass in the genus Micropterus, the largemouth, smallmouth, spotted, and Coosa bass all love crayfish.
Yes. Ospreys will eat most any fish species.
Micropterus dolomieu is the latin name for smallmouth bass.
A black bass is any fish of the genus Micropterus, such as the smallmouth bass or the largemouth bass.
No. The Guadalupe is a Micropterus species, related to largemouth, smallmouth, and spotted bass, and like them, feeds on small fish, crayfish, insects and frogs.
Water snakes, fish such as bass and carp, baby alligators and crocodiles, young turtles, predatory insects such as dragonflies, predatory birds such as blue herons, frogs and other tadpoles
The largemouth, smallmouth, and spotted bass are actually sunfish. The true basses are the white bass, striped bass, and yellow bass, and white perch, of the Morone group.
For largemouth, California, smallmouth, Lake Erie states.
Smallmouth bass, walleye, pike and perch plus others.
In fall, pursuing schools of shad.