beluga whales do have teeth they have 34 teeth but they do not chew
Yes, yes they do.
a beluga whale has all k nine teeth
200
There are many Toothed whales. Here are the most widely known:Sperm WhalesKiller WhalesBeluga WhalesNarwhalsThere is others such as Bottlenose Dolphins, but they are not under the classification of 'whales' in General.Some examples of toothed whales are Orcas/Killer Whales, Pilot Whales, Beluga Whales, Sperm Whales, and a few more examples.sperm whaleswhite beluga whalesblack beluga whales (pilot whales)orca whalesToothed whales are a very large suborder of cetaceans, including sperm whale, beaked whale, orca, and dolphins. Most toothed whales are smaller than the baleen whales. The teeth can be very deferent between species. They may be numerous, with some dolphin bearing over 100 teeth in their jaws. At the other extreme are the narwhal with its one long tusk and the almost toothless beaked whale with bizarre teeth only in males. Not all species are know to use their teeth for feeding. For example, the Sperm Whale likely uses its teeth for aggression and showmanship.Sperm whales have teeth in their lower jaw, which fits into grooves in their upper jaw.
Very, very sharp.
Some whales have teeth (e.g. killer whales) and others have baleen (e.g. blue whales). Baleen works as a filter that catches small organisms as the water passes through it. Generally the whale will take in a large volume of water, close its mouth and force the water back out of the mouth (passing it through the baleen). What remains are the organisms the whale uses as its food resource.
Beluga Whales can be found in good numbers in the seas near the north pole. Their range goes from Alaska and Greenland to Northern Russia. Of the 7 known habitats of the beluga whales, they are critically endangered in 1 and endangered in 2 habitats. Thousands of belugas can be found in the other 4 habitats. Beluga Whales can be found in good numbers in the seas near the north pole. Their range goes from Alaska and Greenland to Northern Russia. Of the 7 known habitats of the beluga whales, they are critically endangered in 1 and endangered in 2 habitats. Thousands of belugas can be found in the other 4 habitats.
It depends. If they are baleen whales, then basically you are looking at many, many long teeth that resembles brushes. If they are toothed whales, then the teeth may look like canines. Look at an orca whale, they're toothed. Tooth whales do have sharp teeth since they have to use then to hunt and stuff
Yes dolphins do look something like whales but whales are much bigger.
Baleen look like long thin teeth placed very close to one another.
No, a beluga whale is a Whale. Actually, belugas are somewhere in between. Bigger than most of the true dolphins (Delphinidae), they are smaller than most of the whales. Belugas are most closely related to narwhals (family Monodontidae)
They look for food,they have teeth,and they have hair.
exactly like a beluga it does not have a horn yet
It used to look like a land creature, with legs and teeth then evovled, in this process the legs shrunk and the mammal grew bigger bigger and bigger to be one of the biggest I think that's the answer to what did WHALES used to look like
There are no prehistoric whales...whales evolved from these dog-like things that swam a lot... that's why when you look at whale skeletons they look a little like dog skeletons