No! What makes the animal an omnivore is what the animal eats.
Herbivore- Only eats leaves and other greenery
Carnivore- Only eats meat
Cannibal- Eats its own species flesh
Omnivore-Eats plants and meat
by its jaw
The teeth in animals grow by eruption - the tooth is fully formed in the jaw and over the animal's life it is slowly forced out of the jaw where it is visible above the gum line. This is why very old animals may be missing some or all of their teeth - the entire tooth has been used and has fallen out of the socket.
The upper jaw on fishes functions the same as the upper jaw in Humans . They just have different teeth. The upper jaw on most animals functions as a platform for the lower jaw to close against .
Yes,your top jaw teeth are over your bottom jaw teeth it is considered an over bite..........
Not exactly. They align your top teeth and bottom teeth to make a (hopefully) perfect bite and a perfect smile. Re-aligning your jaw would require major surgery.
Whether they are a carnivore, omnivore, or herbivore, and also what types of food they consumed, i.e for a herbivore, what types of plants they could eat.
Yes but only the lower front ones they have a dental pad on the top jaw.
frog
The answer is... Your teeth! The jaw protects your teeth in a way that you can flex in different ways... That's how we make funny/stupid faces! :P bye! This is written by Tamara (year 7)
Reach up with your hands and feel your face. Humans are born omnivores. The jaws have teeth for cutting, ripping and grinding and a very powerful articulating hinge arrangement.
baffalo has no upper teeth
Archaeopteryx was likely an omnivore, feeding on a combination of both plant and animal matter. Fossil evidence suggests that it had teeth adapted for eating small prey, but also had claws and a jaw structure that could have facilitated the consumption of plants.