Mammals are a large group of species that eat all types of food...their teeth are
specialized.
Starfish are echinodorms, they are not mammals and do not have teeth.
no, mammals are not the only ones with teeth, there is also alligators and crocs, sharks, dolphins, some fish.Another way to read the question is - do mammals have teeth only?The answer is no - some mammals have just a long, sticky tongue for catching ants and termites. Echidnas, for example, do not have teeth. Some mammals such as the platypus have grinding plates instead of teeth.
teeth that havn't been brushed
Milk teeth would, by definition only occur in mammals, since mammals are the only animals that produce milk for their young. Other animals may well have a set of deciduous teeth that are replaced by adult teeth as they mature.
Because of the shape of the teeth
Mammals
Teeth in mammals are typically differentiated into distinct types, such as incisors, canines, premolars, and molars, each adapted for specific functions like cutting, tearing, and grinding. In contrast, non-mammalian vertebrates, such as reptiles, often have homodont teeth, which are uniform in shape and serve similar functions. Additionally, mammalian teeth are embedded in sockets (alveoli) in the jawbone, while many non-mammals have teeth that are fused to the jaw. This structural and functional diversity reflects the varied diets and feeding strategies among mammals compared to non-mammals.
yes indeed they are mammals they have fur teeth and give live birth
Yes, mammals have more teeth that reptiles. The land mammal with the most teeth is the Giant Armadillo (Priodontes giganteus) with as many as 100 teeth. The average range for mammals however is 20-40. Reptiles rarely have many teeth, if any at all. The crocodile has the most, with around 80 teeth at a time. It replaces as many as 3000 in its lifetime, but this is over a long period of time.
Of course they do- they are mammals and have teeth very much like yours. Go brush them.
Usually, yes, but there are exceptions. For example, baleen whales have teeth as embryos, lose them, and never replace them. Anteaters, pangolins, and echidnas never have teeth. No mammals replace their teeth twice during their lives.
There are several mammals which do not have teeth. The echidna is an Australian mammal, a monotreme which only has a sticky tongue. The platypus is another Australian monotreme which has grinding plates, rather than teeth. Sloths, anteaters, tamanduas, pangolins, baleen whales, and adult monotremes are all toothless mammals.