Yes they do grow throughout the donkeys life
donkeys have 34! teeth!!!!!!!!!!!!! donkeys have 34! teeth!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Donkeys usually lose their baby teeth when they are anywhere from two to five years old. Their adult teeth usually come in quickly.
by rubbing them on stones
yes
Justin beiber
donkeys have 34! teeth!!!!!!!!!!!!! donkeys have 34! teeth!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Yes, rodents' teeth continue to grow throughout their lives.
Yes, squirrel teeth continue to grow throughout their lives.
Yes, squirrels' teeth continue to grow throughout their lives.
No, if they did, their teeth would get scratches.
Donkeys usually lose their baby teeth when they are anywhere from two to five years old. Their adult teeth usually come in quickly.
by rubbing them on stones
yes
Justin beiber
A herbivore's teeth continue to grow throughout its lifetime because herbivores have high-wear teeth that need to constantly grow and be replaced due to the constant abrasion caused by their plant-based diet. This continuous growth helps maintain the functionality of their teeth for grinding tough plant material effectively.
Instead of ripping the grass right away with their teeth, donkeys grab the plant with their lips, pull it in their mouth, then rip it with their flat teeth and grind it down for swallowing
No. Answer2: A horses teeth are fully grown by the time they lose their baby or milk teeth. Once this happens the horses adult teeth begin to erupt through the gum-line and continue to do this for the vast majority of their adult life. The purpose of dental eruption in horses is to replace the amount of tooth lost to chewing up the tough forages horses evolved to eat. The forages are tough and wear down the dental surfaces necessitating dental eruption to replace what was lost.