blind bats....loll they keep smacking into tree's
Many animals have absolutely no teeth at all, such as birds or anteaters. However, a sloth has four molars, but no incisors.
Bats are not a species, they belong to the order Chiroptera. Some species of bat are endangered, but not all. Bats as a whole are not endangered.
The land mammal with the fewest teeth is the armadillo. It has just a few peg-like molars. However, apart from some mammals which have no teeth at all (such as anteaters, echidnas and platypuses), the mammal with the fewest teeth is the narwhal. A marine mammal, the narwhal has just two teeth. These teeth are not inside the narwhal's mouths, but are buried in their upper jaws in both males and females. Only one tooth is visible, and that is the left tooth of the male, which can grow to around 2.4 metres.
yes they do. infact they have 120 all together
About 75% of all species of bats are insect eaters.
In most species of frogs there are not teeth on the lower jaw. They have only teeth on their top maxilla. However, there is one species that does have them on their lower jaw but it is a rare species, Amphingnathodon. This species has teeth on the lower jaw.
yes,all bat species were alive at that time including vampire bats, brown bats and fishing bats.
Mammals are a large group of species that eat all types of food...their teeth are specialized.
no
The shrew has the most teeth of all these animals, with up to 32 teeth depending on the species. Bears typically have 42 teeth, tigers have 30 teeth, and possums have 50 teeth.
Dragonflies, bats, and spiders are all species that dine on mosquitos.
all have just a few sets but the harp has tons of sets