No
Lobsters have their teeth in their stomach. They chew their food in their stomach, which is very close to their mouth, between three grinding surfaces that look like molar teeth called the "gastric mill"
Lobsters' teeth are located in their stomach!
They have no teeth! This answer is not correct they do have teeth their teeth are housed in their stomach
Lobsters have their teeth in their stomach. They chew their food in their stomach, which is very close to their mouth, between three grinding surfaces that look like molar teeth called the "gastric mill".
There are two of them. The first is located in the lobster's "head", just behind the eyes and brain. It is called the cardiac stomach. The second one is right after the first. It is called the pyloric stomach. It extends to the abdomen.
Lobsters can perform some food processing with their claws and mouth parts, including the mandibles and maxillae, but much of the fine food processing happens in a chamber in the stomach called the gastric mill. The gastric mill has three teeth, which are not bony but chitinous, which chew food that makes its way down the lobster's gastrointestinal tract.
the animal with their teeth in their stomach is a lobster
Humans eat lobsters. Lobsters eat each other also. Anything large that has very sharp teeth, and that eats meat can eat a lobster too.
Teeth bite, cut and chew food, before it is swallowed and passed down into the stomach, where the food is digested.
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lobster