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Yes, they share this trait with the rest of the rodent Order.
Yes they do grow throughout the donkeys life
rats teeth grow constantly throughout their life, they wear them down when they eat or grind their teeth.
Hi, The answer to your question is Yes. Well that is for the sheeps that do grow horns as there are few types that do not. The ones that do grow horns however grow them their entire lifetime. So if they grow their whole life then yes it would grow back if it broke. Here is a link about sheep, some sheeps have 4 horns. http://www.sheep101.info/horns.html
As most living things do beavers DO continue to grow throughout their life. Thanks for asking, please ask again.
No. Answer2: A horses teeth are fully grown by the time they lose their baby or milk teeth. Once this happens the horses adult teeth begin to erupt through the gum-line and continue to do this for the vast majority of their adult life. The purpose of dental eruption in horses is to replace the amount of tooth lost to chewing up the tough forages horses evolved to eat. The forages are tough and wear down the dental surfaces necessitating dental eruption to replace what was lost.
No
Yes transplanted hair will be fully mature and will continue to grow for a life time.
No. Wombats are marsupials. However, wombats' teeth are unlike those of other marsupials, and more like a rodent's teeth. They continue to grow throughout the wombat's life, and so this marsupial must regularly gnaw on wood and other items that will help wear down the teeth.
Because they are the set that are to last you for your adult life. If you pull your adult teeth out, they will not grow back.
all animals grow throughout their entire life time. which is why when you get a puppy or small animal, it can grow into very large dog or cat
Horses' teeth continue to grow out of the jaws throughtout their life until somewhere around 30 years of age. Because they continue to grow and are worn at different rates due to things like diet content and conformation of the jaws, they can be worn to sharp points which lead to pain when chewing and lack of ability to effectively grind forage and concentrate feeds. Floating is done to grind these points and sharp edges off and provide a better grinding surface to the teeth.