yes
Sharks' teeth are attached to their gums, similar to how human teeth are attached. Sharks continuously shed and replace their teeth throughout their lifetime.
Sharks may have over 20000 teeth in a lifetime.
no,They only have 100 teeth
Sharks are constantly shedding and regrowing their teeth. Over a lifetime they can lose and grow up to 50,000 teeth.
They usually replace the teeth instead of losing them. But usually the teeth are replaced every two weeks. A lemon shark replaces its teeth every 8-10 days. Young great white sharks replace there teeth every 100 days and old great white sharks replace their teeth every 230 days. The cookiecutter shark sheds the whole lower jaw at once.
Thinks that Sharks in a daily time can grow thousands of teeths is impossiblee.
Sharks have multiple rows of teeth arranged in several layers. They continuously shed and replace their teeth throughout their lifetime, with some species capable of producing thousands of teeth in a year.
because they have like these escalators that push teeth forward when they loose a tooth so their not toothless in a section
Yes, both sharks and crocodiles can regrow broken or lost teeth throughout their lifetime. Sharks continuously shed and replace their teeth, while crocodiles have the ability to regrow their teeth when they are damaged or lost.
Yes. When a tooth breaks, another takes place in its row. A shark replaces more than 35,000 teeth in a lifetime.
There is no way to count them. A shark's teeth are constantly growing and replacing any that are knocked out, so there's just no way to figure out how many they will have.
True, they are! There are several rows of teeth that regenerate over the course of the shark's lifetime.