elodont
Rodents and lagomorphs both have continuously growing incisors. Lagomorphs and herbivorous rodents also have continuously growing molars. The tusks of many mammals, such as elephants, wild boars, and walruses, also grow continuously.
They are rodents, known for their continuously growing incisors. Rodents include species like mice, rats, squirrels, and beavers, all of which have to gnaw to keep their teeth from overgrowing.
NO lemurs are not rodents; they are PRIMATES. The Aye-aye, a type of lemur, is like a rodent in that it lacks canine teeth and has continuously growing incisors (teeth) that wear down by chewing.
no. beavers are rodents because all rodents have teeth that never stop growing. a beavers teeth never stop growing!
Yes, rodents' teeth continue to grow throughout their lives.
all rodents have continually growing front teeth, because they have no roots
yes they are rodents
all rodents have continually growing front teeth, because they have no roots
Rodents. The incisors of the order Rodentia grow continuously and if they do not chew constantly, their teeth will pierce its brain.
Rodents incisors and rabbits
Rabbit, mouse, beaver apparently all rodents
Several animals have 100 teeth or more, including some species of sharks, which can have several rows of teeth and lose them regularly throughout their lives. The alligator, with its 74 to 80 teeth, can replace them continuously, but certain species of fish, like the pufferfish, can also have numerous teeth that fuse into a beak-like structure. Additionally, some rodents, such as beavers, have continuously growing incisors, though they typically have fewer than 100 teeth in total.