A shark is one
Constantly growing teeth are called elodont teeth. Sharks are an example of an organism that has this. Humans do not have elodont teeth.
Reptiles grow new teeth throughout their lives. This is extremely common in reptiles like alligators and crocodiles, who frequently lose their teeth.
Sharks have 5 or more rows of teeth. Humans only have 20 baby teeth and 32 adult teeth. Sharks can re-grow teeth. Humans only get 2 sets (milk teeth and permanent teeth). Sharks have serrated edges on their teeth. Shark teeth are not attached to the jaw. Humans bite and chew with their teeth. Sharks use their teeth to rip their prey apart.
The animal that represented the Chinese New Year in 1967 is the sheep.
The animal that represented the Chinese New Year in 1965 was the snake.
No but you can replace a gear with a new one.
You Might Get It In Your Little Age Or When Your Older And If Your Already A False Teeth Then Replace It With A New One :) ;)
Addies doctor visit
An animal with a keen sense of smell, long claws, and sharp teeth.
Reptiles and fish both regularly replace their teeth. This way they avoid the problems that mammals can get with dental disease. Old teeth are eliminated before they become diseased, and they are replaced by new teeth.
you lose your teeth because new teeth are growing in and the new teeth push the current teeth and you have brand new healthy shiny teeth!
Constantly growing teeth are called elodont teeth. Sharks are an example of an organism that has this. Humans do not have elodont teeth.
No. Sharks lose one, maybe two teeth at a time, and new ones slide in to replace them. It's like a tooth conveyer belt!
try to get new ones to replace it or take them to a animal shelter
Well, for instance, if a starfish lost its arm or got it cut off, then slowly a new arm would replace it by growing back.
Sharks have rows of teeth (flattened down) behind those they are currently using to bite with. If one breaks, one of these replacement teeth moves forwards (rotates up) to replace it withing 1 or 2 days. The spare teeth are constantly replaced throughout the shark's life.
because the new teeth will come