Slugs eat with something called a radula—a. tiny tongue covered in 27,000 microscopic teeth! Slug teeth may be small, but they are also effective! Banana slugs are known for eating 3 times their body.
Snails have the most teeth of any animal
A garden snail has about 14,000 teeth while other species can have over 20,000. But that's not even the most shocking part: The teeth of an aquatic snail called the limpet are the strongest known biological material on Earth, even stronger than titanium!
5 – Great White Sharks
The Great White Shark is the largest predatory fish on earth, and it wields a lot of impressive teeth. Great White Sharks have around 3,000 teeth in their mouth at one time in multiple rows on their jaws.
Elephants usually have 26 teeth: the incisors, known as the tusks, 12 deciduous premolars, and 12 molars. Unlike most mammals, which grow baby teeth and then replace them with a single permanent set of adult teeth, elephants are polyphyodonts that have cycles of tooth rotation throughout their lives.
Which animal has 100000 teeth? Even the largest variety, the African giant snail, typically only grows to a size of 30 cm. in length and 18 cm. in width, so it's shocking to find out that they have around 25,600 teeth.
Number 27: Cuspid or canine. Number 28: 1st Bicuspid or 1st premolar. Number 29: 2nd Bicuspid or 2nd premolar. Number 30: 1st Molar.
Leech: The interior structure of a leech is divided into 32 different segments, each of which has its own brain.
But over the course of their lifetime, "estimates suggest some species of requiem sharks may grow and shed 30,000 teeth," Naylor told Live Science. That's threefold more than the great white (Carcharodon carcharias), which goes through about 10,000 during its lifetime.
That title belongs to the Saltwater Crocodile, which has a bite force of 3,700 pounds per square inch! By comparison, humans can only generate a bite force of around 150 – 200 pounds per square inch.
Snails: Who would assume that this seemingly harmless gastropod has teeth made of the strongest biological material, even stronger than titanium? Additionally, they have about 20,000 teeth – which is more than any other animal – that line its tongues since snails are among those animals that don't have jaws.
Crocodiles
Crocodiles can have almost 60 teeth at any one time, double the amount of teeth that we have! A crocodile can have over 2000 teeth during its lifetime and they too lose their teeth fairly regularly just like sharks.
There are over 3,000 species of snake on the planet, and each one has its own distinct dentition. Some (like the boa constrictor) have up to 200 teeth, while others (like king cobras) have under 100 teeth.
The average garden snail has around 14,000 teeth! Is there any animal with more?
Both African and Asian elephants have a total of 26 teeth including two upper incisors (tusks), 12 premolars (non-permanent teeth similar to baby teeth), and 12 molars.
Dragonflies (Anisoptera)
Some species of dragonfly have more than 28,000 lenses per compound eye, a greater number than any other living creature.
Nigersaurus had a delicate skull and an extremely wide mouth lined with teeth especially adapted for browsing plants close to the ground. This bizarre, long-necked dinosaur is characterized by its unusually broad, straight-edged muzzle tipped with more than 500 replaceable teeth.
Based on the discovery of a single tooth, researchers say they have identified an ancient species of giant platypus.
Most monkeys have the same number of teeth as humans do: 32, with 16 on top and 16 on bottom. However, the type of teeth depend on a monkey's location. Old World monkeys (meaning those who live in Africa or Asia) have 12 molars, eight pre-molars, four canines, and eight incisors, just as humans do.
One group of segmented marine worms has pink blood. This is because the molecule that carries the oxygen is a type of blood pigment, known as hemerythrin, which is described as pink or purple.
The icefish of the Channichthyidae family are unusual in several ways — they lack scales and have transparent bones, for example — but what stands out most is their so-called white blood, which is unique among vertebrates.
Can you guess what animals might have blue blood? Lobsters, crabs, pillbugs, shrimp, octopus, crayfish, scallops, barnacles, snails, small worms (except earthworms), clams, squid, slugs, mussels, horseshoe crabs, most spiders.
We start with Tooth #1, a molar on the back right side of our mouths known as the upper right quadrant. Dentists and dental hygienists will count through to Tooth #16, located in the upper left quadrant.
Teeth numbers 14 and 15 are your upper left molars.