yes they do have mandibles, they are those weird things by their jaws, they are sometimes big and fuzzy. there are two of them. they are shaped like ovals and they can move them.
Yes, spiders have mandibles, which are their jaw-like structures used for feeding. They use their mandibles to grasp and crush their prey, inject venom, and manipulate their silk for building webs.
There is a woodlouse hunter (spider) that has pretty large mandibles. Do a google images search on it and see if that is what you are thinking.
Mandibles are used to crush food.
yes they have mandibles that can be seen if you look closely.
Mandibles are jaws and are used for eating.
Yes. The lower jawbones are the whales mandibles
Mandibles are jaws. Find the mouth and you will find the mandibles.
Chelicerae and mandibles are both types of mouthparts found in different groups of arthropods. Chelicerae are characteristic of arachnids (like spiders and scorpions) and typically consist of two segments, often functioning as pincers or fangs. In contrast, mandibles are found in crustaceans and insects, featuring a pair of jaw-like structures used for biting, chewing, or gripping food. The key difference lies in their structure, function, and the groups of animals that possess them.
Mandibles are frequently fractured in a boxing contest.
Neither has teeth. The grasshopper has chewing mouth parts called mandibles and the spider has hollow venom-injecting fangs. Both are modified legs.
they have 678 mandibles. And its used to 796595465/85744785789
Usually on it's head. (Ex. Ant, beetle, cockroach)