Sharks have 5 or more rows of teeth. Humans only have 20 baby teeth and 32 adult teeth. Sharks can re-grow teeth. Humans only get 2 sets (milk teeth and permanent teeth). Sharks have serrated edges on their teeth. Shark teeth are not attached to the jaw. Humans bite and chew with their teeth. Sharks use their teeth to rip their prey apart.
Sharks' teeth are attached to their gums, similar to how human teeth are attached. Sharks continuously shed and replace their teeth throughout their lifetime.
Yes, both sharks and crocodiles can regrow broken or lost teeth throughout their lifetime. Sharks continuously shed and replace their teeth, while crocodiles have the ability to regrow their teeth when they are damaged or lost.
Sharks have multiple rows of teeth arranged in several layers. They continuously shed and replace their teeth throughout their lifetime, with some species capable of producing thousands of teeth in a year.
They usually replace the teeth instead of losing them. But usually the teeth are replaced every two weeks. A lemon shark replaces its teeth every 8-10 days. Young great white sharks replace there teeth every 100 days and old great white sharks replace their teeth every 230 days. The cookiecutter shark sheds the whole lower jaw at once.
Sharks have the ability to continuously replace their teeth throughout their lifetime. When a tooth falls out or gets damaged, a new one grows in its place. This process helps sharks maintain their hunting abilities and overall dental health.
Sharks' teeth are attached to their gums, similar to how human teeth are attached. Sharks continuously shed and replace their teeth throughout their lifetime.
Yes, both sharks and crocodiles can regrow broken or lost teeth throughout their lifetime. Sharks continuously shed and replace their teeth, while crocodiles have the ability to regrow their teeth when they are damaged or lost.
Sharks have multiple rows of teeth arranged in several layers. They continuously shed and replace their teeth throughout their lifetime, with some species capable of producing thousands of teeth in a year.
They usually replace the teeth instead of losing them. But usually the teeth are replaced every two weeks. A lemon shark replaces its teeth every 8-10 days. Young great white sharks replace there teeth every 100 days and old great white sharks replace their teeth every 230 days. The cookiecutter shark sheds the whole lower jaw at once.
Sharks have the ability to continuously replace their teeth throughout their lifetime. When a tooth falls out or gets damaged, a new one grows in its place. This process helps sharks maintain their hunting abilities and overall dental health.
all the time but sharks have an infamous number of teeth every time they loose one of their teeth there is one other one to replace it no matter how many times that tooth is lost
how sharp is the hammerhaed sharks teeth
Sharks are born with a certain number of teeth. These are formed in spiral rows, with all but the tooth they are using folded flat. If one tooth gets knocked out, another one in the row will move into place. If the shark lost all of it's teeth, it would starve.
tiger sharks teeth are about 3inches long
yes white sharks have cutting edges and blue sharks have curved teeth
ALL SHARKS HAVE WHITE TEETH, WHEN THE TEETH FALL OUT AND GET OLDER THEY TURN BLACK
Yes, sharks' teeth are breakable just like us humans.