Mostly carnivores.
Tusks really are teeth. They're sharp, long, and curved. They stick out beyond the mouths of such animals that have them: elephants, narwhals, walruses, and wild boars.
Animals have differently-shaped mouths depending on their main food source. Carnivores, such as lions and wolves, for example, have long jaws and sharp fangs -- and even sharp molars! -- for ripping meat and hide and for crushing bone. Herbivores, such as sheep and cattle, have relatively small mouths and many molars for eating tough grasses and other plants. Birds have short beaks for picking apart seeds, long beaks for stabbing fish, or bills for straining aquatic plants. Butterflies have long tubes for sucking up nectar. Animals' mouths are adapted to access the food they eat.
Its animals with sharp teeths.
to protect there home and them self
Strange animals with pretty little mouths.
with their mouths
All Animals do
No animals live in Antarctica.
They eat plants. With their mouths.
animals with sharp teeth
Yes, penguins do have mouths. Their mouths are adapted for their diet, which primarily consists of fish, squid, and krill. Penguins have a beak with a sharp edge that helps them catch and hold onto slippery prey, and their mouths contain specialized structures to aid in swallowing.
The same way as all other animals - with their mouths.