If by round, you mean 'not sharp' that would be most of the vegetarian animals, such as: cows, deer and koalas.
They have wider flatter teeth in order to chew plants, grass, leaves and vegetation, kind of like the molars humans have in the back of the mouth.
Some animals that have flat teeth are cows and sheep. Animals that eat only plants also known as herbivores have flat teeth.
Elephants
Humans have a mix
Some monkeys
and some rabbits
dog,tiger,lion
Snail
Pigs
carabao
hyenas
Cow
So they can eat plants, but not animals.
Large flat teeth are designed for chewing and breaking down tough plant material. Many herbivores use their lips to cut plants down instead of their teeth.
flesh eating carnivore animals are generally sharper as they rip off flesh of a animal and the plant eating animals herbivores teeth are blunter as they just eat plants their teeth are also flat so they can grind the food before swallowing
They eat plants .Because if they were pointy it could tear meat very easily.
Well everyone should know that one by now, the answer is a piranha or maybe a pike, Zanders, Barakuda.
Herbivores have broad and sharp teeth in the front to break (tear) the food and a broad flat teeth on its back side for grinding the food.
So they can eat plants, but not animals.
broad,flat teeth
Dogs
Herbivores
becuz you are a stinky monky!
the teeth of carnivores were sharp so that they could cut through meat and bone easily. and since herbivores didn't need that their teeth were flat
the teeth of carnivores were sharp so that they could cut through meat and bone easily. and since herbivores didn't need that their teeth were flat
I think plants because dinosaurs that have flat teeth eat plants
Bison have 12 molars, 12 premolars, 2 canines, and 6 incisors, for a total of 32 teeth. They have a high crown that curves slightly downward. Like most animals, buffalo are born with baby teeth (milk teeth) which they begin losing at about a year old when their first permanent teeth grow in.
Most animals that have both flat and pointed teeth are omnivorous, ie; they eat both meat and vegetable matter. However, in some cases the animal may be in the process of evolving into a herbivore (which eats only plants) but still has pointed teeth (such as the panda, which has bear-like teeth but eats only bamboo) or the gorilla (which has both pointed and flat teeth but eats only plants). Despite their teeth, both of these animals have digestive systems suited to consuming only plant matter.
They eat both plants and animals.