No it does not
Yes, mammals have more teeth that reptiles. The land mammal with the most teeth is the Giant Armadillo (Priodontes giganteus) with as many as 100 teeth. The average range for mammals however is 20-40. Reptiles rarely have many teeth, if any at all. The crocodile has the most, with around 80 teeth at a time. It replaces as many as 3000 in its lifetime, but this is over a long period of time.
if the mammal's teeth are strong they are more capable of eating stronger prey
Soft tissue.
For one, this marsupial has a pouch that it carries it's young in. Also, it has more than 50 teeth, more than any other mammal.
Birds do not have teeth. Mammals have differentiated teeth while the teeth in the mouth of a given reptile are more or less the same except for the fangs of venomous snakes.
a marten has 38 teeth. to find out more go to http://www.nationaltrappers.com/marten.html
Typically, mammals have more teeth than reptiles. Mammals generally have specialized teeth for different functions such as cutting, tearing, and grinding food. Reptiles, on the other hand, may have fewer teeth or even be toothless, depending on the species.
Antelope, anteater, armadillo, Aardvark, ape, Aardwolf, Alpaca, ass (as in donkey), agouti, artiodactyl (even-toed hoofed mammal) Aye-aye, angwantibo, etc. There are many more that have more than one word (e g American Badger).
The spiny anteater, more properly known as the echidna, is a mammal, so it does indeed feed its young on mothers' milk.
Yes, they have peg-like teeth for grinding their food. They have no incisors or canine teeth.
1 difference is that the giant armadillo has more bands on its shell. another difference is that the giant armadillo is bigger. i think the next fact is true. the giant armadillo can breath fire 10 feet longer than a armadillo.
Aardvark, Angus cattle, antelope, Arabian horse, armadillo, Akita and Alaskan malamute are mammals. They begin with the letter a.