ALL SHARKS HAVE WHITE TEETH, WHEN THE TEETH FALL OUT AND GET OLDER THEY TURN BLACK
A bull shark can have up to fifty rows of teeth. When teeth fall out, they are replaced with new ones, similar to how humans lose their baby teeth.
A bull shark can have up to fifty rows of teeth. When teeth fall out, they are replaced with new ones, similar to how humans lose their baby teeth.
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no
No just bull sharks.
12,000,345 teeth
whale sharks have 3000 little teeth but they do not use many due to their special ways of feeding
No, bull sharks are not extinct, but they are threatened.
Sharks' teeth are arranged in series; when one tooth is damaged or lost, it is replaced by another. Most sharks may have about 5 series of teeth at any time. The front set is the largest and does most of the work. A bull shark might have 50 "rows" of teeth, with 7 teeth in each "row" (one for each series). This would therefore be 350 teeth (approximately, since some rows might be incomplete).
The great white sharks actually have that many teeth and they have three rows of them. This applies to all sharks that they have many rows of teeth or just many teeth.
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