Well sharks are born with many teeth. It can help because when they lose a tooth then another one is pushed up to the front so they can eat well. I hope this helps and please recommend me!
The great white sharks actually have that many teeth and they have three rows of them. This applies to all sharks that they have many rows of teeth or just many teeth.
Sharks have five to fifteen rows of teeth, and may have up to 3000 teeth at one time. Technically, sharks do not have teeth as they are actually sharpened scales, that's why they grow back so quickly when they lose them so easily
To eat and tear food......... I think they have 3 rows of teeth,so the amount is in the hundreds.
It's always different, but most sharks usually have hundreds of either tiny or huge teeth. *Fun Fact* Did you know sharks have rows of teeth, so when they loose one, another one moves back in it's place, usually bigger than the old one!
Sharks have multiple rows of teeth in their jaws, with new teeth constantly growing and replacing old ones. This process ensures that the shark always has sharp and efficient teeth for hunting and feeding.
A shark has rows of teeth so when one falls out another one moves to the front, a bit like a drinks machine :)
They usually replace the teeth instead of losing them. But usually the teeth are replaced every two weeks. A lemon shark replaces its teeth every 8-10 days. Young great white sharks replace there teeth every 100 days and old great white sharks replace their teeth every 230 days. The cookiecutter shark sheds the whole lower jaw at once.
Most sharks have about 3-5 rows of teeth at any time. The front set does most of the work. The first two rows are used for obtaining prey, the other rows rotate into place as they are needed. As teeth are lost, broken, or worn down, they are replaced by new teeth. Megalodon may have had hundreds of teeth at one time.
Hammerhead sharks have 38 to 46 teeth. However, they have more than one row of teeth so they can have over 100.
jumpropes are so sticky!
scientists are studying shark skin to come up with a material to put on the bottom of boats so they don't get barnacles. Sharks never have barnacles on their skin. this is not because they swim fast but because there are tiny rides in their skin. Shark teeth as I've heard so far are used for nothing but necklaces and novelties. It doesn't hurt the shark though. Sharks have many rows of teeth, they lose them all the time. eventually after the teeth are lost they end up on shore where people can find them. I hope this helped! :)
There is no way to count them. A shark's teeth are constantly growing and replacing any that are knocked out, so there's just no way to figure out how many they will have.