yes, they may not have a toothbrush but the salt water acts like a great material for cleaning teeth.
No, dog teeth do not fall out and regrow like human teeth. Dogs have two sets of teeth in their lifetime: baby teeth, which fall out and are replaced by permanent adult teeth.
The omnivore's teeth structure help it eat both meat and plants because they are not like very blunt knives,(for eating plants.)nor like very sharp knives(for eating meat.).They are in between.
Not like human teeth, but they do have serated "teeth" on their wing parts that they rub together to make a loud trilling sound.
No, baby orangutans do not have teeth when they are born. Much like human children, they first grow baby teeth and later adult teeth.
No, crabs do not have teeth in the sense that most people think. They have tooth-like structures in their stomachs in a chamber called the gastric mill which performs food processing, just like the teeth in your mouth. Unlike your teeth, the teeth in a crab's gastric mill are not made of bone, but of a material called chitin, which is the same material that makes up most of a crab's shell.
There are 32 teeth in an adult human.
yes they do not have teeth but they don't bite human flesh, they only eat plants
The same thing that human fingernails and animal hooves are made of, a protein called keratin.
Yes, but only their puppy teeth, just like a human child looses their teeth. An adult dog shouldn't be loosing any of their teeth.
Dentin is a material found in teeth. The dentin material found in teeth is just under the layer of enamel.
Human material remains are physical remnants of a person's body after death, such as bones, teeth, or hair. These remains can provide valuable information about an individual's identity, health, and lifestyle to archaeologists, anthropologists, and forensic scientists. Studying human material remains can help researchers understand the past societies and individuals.