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fursona research
the giant armadillo is the land mammal with the most permanent teeth at 74
sea slugs go through 750,000 teeth in a lifetime
orcas have the sharpest teeth of all animals
the water deer has retractable saberteeth and is classified as a deer despite not being true deer
there is a species of duck with a sawbill that has been nicknamed the tooth duck
the hyena and the titan triggerfish both have teeth and jaws strong enough to crush bone
mosquitos have 47 teeth
walrus and elephant tusks are teeth. so are narwhal “horns”
the phrase “long in the teeth” meaning that you’re getting on in years is because horse gums recede as they get older, thus making their teeth look longer
giraffes and humans have the same number of teeth
lobsters and crabs have teeth in their stomach. minnows have teeth in their throats
the paraya fish has fangs that can grow up to 7 inches long that they use to impale their prey
the crabeater seal has teeth that work as a sieve to filter out things larger than the krill they eat
naked mole rat teeth are on the outside of their lips to keep dirt out of their mouths while they dig
you can tell the age of both dolphins and horses via their teeth.
dolphin teeth have rings similar to the ones in trees that you can see when their teeth are bisected horizontally.
horse gums recede uniformly over the years, so you can see how old they are based on how much tooth is visible. this is the origin of the phrase “don’t look a gift horse in the mouth”
pangolin do not have teeth
beavers have orange teeth
echidnas don’t have teeth OR nipples
dragonfish have evolved transparent teeth so that fish can’t see them behind their bioluminescent lure
lamprey eels have no jaws, just a circular mouth with very strong suction
i got so caught up in teeth facts i forgot to make a fursona
i love you and your fixations but this post feels like a cry for help









