Not like the teeth of other animals, especially mammals and humans, which are specialized chewing tools. The two mandibles (jaws) of ants are used for grabbing, biting, and cutting. The lower protuberances of the mandibles (called the teeth) are a fixed portion of the appendage, and not internal structures.
yes,they can eat ants they dont even need arms and legs amazing isn't it. Gust pop a few in and they will eat them. I haven't fed them ants yet but i will becouse someone wrote a comment on it.
Ants don't have teeth in the way that humans and other mammals have teeth. They have jaws called mandibles and maxillae, and those jaws have pointy bits on the part with which the ant bites. (Human jaws are also called mandibles and maxillae, but they are quite different.) The pointy bits on ants' jaws are usually called teeth, even by entomologists, the people who study insects. However, many such jaws have rows of teeth like a saw blade, and then we say that the jaw is serrated and the teeth may be called serrations. If you want to be technical, you can call one such tooth a dens, and could speak of dentes when there are many. Both words are from the Latin for tooth, from which we also get the word "dentist". If the teeth are very small, they can be called "denticles".
These are all types of ants
Ants that eat other ants.
Not all flying ants are carpenter ants. However, all carpenter ants can fly. There are various types of flying ants. Carpenter ants can be distinguished by their larger size and reddish tone to their body.
no their teeth are not sharp
An echidna does not have teeth. It has a long, sticky tongue which it uses to catch termites and ants.
They have no teeth. Instead they have long sticky touge to eat there major food ants
An echidna does not have teeth. It has a long, sticky tongue which it uses to catch termites and ants.
Anteaters do not need teeth they just use a long sticky tongue to collect the ants.
Yes. Their teeth are required to chew through the exoskeletons of the ants, beetles, and grasshoppers they like to eat.
An antelope is a herbivore and therefore has teeth similar to those of other herbivores. Its teeth are made for grinding rather than tearing.
Certain ants have unusual color markings or structures. The Fire Ant is colored red and have sharp teeth unlike many ants.
Early ants had only two teeth, but most modern ants have more - although some are nearly toothless. Larger workers of "nearly toothless" species may have slight hints of teeth but smaller workers have none. The teeth are made of the same tough stuff as an ant's exoskeleton. They look like, and are, extensions of the mandibles. Some ants have many sharp teeth to penetrate and hold a soft-bodied, squirmy insect long enough to sting it. But such teeth break when the mandibles snap together on a tough foe like a termite soldier. Ants after hard-bodied prey have blunt teeth, and crush the insect with a blow like a sprung trap from their quick-closing jaws. An African driver ant can bite with her sharp teeth hard enough to hurt a person badly. In fact, these fierce insects can swarm over a large mammal, and literally slice it to death.
yes,they can eat ants they dont even need arms and legs amazing isn't it. Gust pop a few in and they will eat them. I haven't fed them ants yet but i will becouse someone wrote a comment on it.
Echidnas do not bite, as they do not have teeth. An echidna has a long, sticky tongue which it uses to catch termites and ants.
open her legs and insert ur cock into them....