Some shark species can grow up to 30,000 teeth in their lifetime
A shark can have as many as 50,000 teeth in it's lifetime with 5 to 15 rows in it's upper and lower jaw.
The Tiger shark can have up to 3,000 teeth in its body at a time. Over its lifespan it can have up to 30,000 teeth!The Sand Tiger Shark can have about 3000 or more teeth at once. Throughout its lifetime it can have about 30 000 teeth.
I don't know, count them yourself
a shark grows its teeth back twice like humands
A bull shark typically has around 50-65 rows of teeth in each jaw, with each row containing about 7 teeth. This means an adult bull shark can have around 300-350 teeth in total. They constantly shed and replace their teeth throughout their lifetime.
There is no way to count them. A shark's teeth are constantly growing and replacing any that are knocked out, so there's just no way to figure out how many they will have.
They can lose up to 35,000
Many teeth fall out each time a shark bites., so in a lifetime sharks have about 2000 teeth. But I think the megaladon has about as much as the great white does, only much bigger. (at a time).
Humans have two sets of teeth in their lifetime.
The Whale shark - the biggest of all shark species (they're the size of a schoolbus), have tiny, primordial teeth - most shark experts believe they are useless, and that whale sharks are plankton and krill eaters.
a shark has 3 rows of teeth and about 3,000 teeth in a life time.