Toads do not have teeth on the upper jaw. Instead, they possess a bony ridge that helps them grip their prey. Their lower jaw can have small, peg-like teeth, but these are not used for chewing; rather, they assist in holding onto food. Toads primarily swallow their prey whole.
Frogs have smooth skin and usually have small teeth in their upper jaws, and toads have lumpy skin and no teeth at all.
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.
Moose would have about 32 teeth, majority on the lower jaw than the upper, though molars are found on both top and bottom jaws.
Yes, horned toads have teeth. They use these teeth to chew and eat their favorite insects as prey.
A large heavy bodied shark dark on top, white below the nose is pointed and the jaws are triangular, serrated teeth
Jaws
jaws are imortant because you wouldn't be able to eat or what would your teeth be on
Firebelly do not have teeth .They have strong jaws to eat food.
No. Horned Toads eat ants mostly, with termites and beetles. They don't eat anything other than insects, so they wouldn't be eating their lizard young.
Platypuses do not have teeth; they have grinding plates in their jaws instead of teeth.
Yes think of Jaws.
The part of the jaws where the teeth arise