mandables are removed last because attached to them are the maxillae and aixilliped, so those would be removed before, leaving the mandibles last.
The crayfish's mouth is located underneath their head. They are able to chew and crush their food by the mandibles.
The chelipeds, mandibles, mazillae, and mazillipeds
The mandibles on a crab scoop food into its mouth. In most species they are hard-shelled and can scrape or slice into edible materials. Crabs do not chew their food, so the mandibles separate it into small parts.
A crayfish's mouth is located on the bottom side of its head, just behind its antennae. The crayfish has numerous mouth appendages including 2 sets of maxilla, 3 sets of maxillipeds, and mandibles.
According to the book "The crayfish of Missouri" written by William L. Pflieger "The mouth parts of a crayfish consists of five parts of overlapping structures, each with its own role in crushing and shredding the food before it is ingested." "the largest of these structures are the heavy tooth-like mandibles." The link depicts a detailed image of the mouth parts.
Mandibles are jaws. Find the mouth and you will find the mandibles.
the tail
Mandibles are used to crush food.
Mandibles are jaws and are used for eating.
Yes. The lower jawbones are the whales mandibles
yes they have mandibles that can be seen if you look closely.
Crustaceans are animals like crabs, lobsters, and crayfish. Crustaceans have two pairs of antennae, two pairs of maxillae, and mandibles, which are like jaws. They are biramous, which means their legs bend in two places.