Humpback whales are a species of baleen whale, meaning that they do not have teeth; rather, they have baleen plates that they use to filter seawater and extract small prey animals.
How many teeth? None. Humpbacks are baleen whales.
they have baleen.
Humpback Whales don't have teeth. They just swallow everything they eat.
teeth
Humpbacks are baleen whales, filter feeders. They don't have anything resembling normal teeth.
No, they have baleen. Tooth buds do develop in fetuses, but these aren't retained.
No the blue whales have bristles like the humpback to act as a filter to catch plankton and krill.
No, they are called huts. They are brushy like a broom. Booyah!
Sperm whales have 70 teeth, depending on their age.
No, humpback whales only eat plankton and occasionally small fish. They have baleen instead of teeth so they wouldn't be able to bite at the whale shark. Whale sharks also eat plankton and sometimes small fish.
I'm not sure myself but my mom says over 900 at least
No, the humpback whale is not an odontocete; it is a member of the baleen whale suborder, Mysticeti. Odontocetes, or toothed whales, include species like dolphins, sperm whales, and orcas, which have teeth instead of baleen plates. Humpback whales filter-feed using baleen to consume small fish and krill.