Mammals’ mouths contain up to four main types of teeth: incisors, canines, premolars and molars. This basic but incredibly flexible tool kit evolved early in the evolutionary history of mammals.
Trying to describe some of the more extreme sets of teeth across the mammal world could end up sounding like the boldest of infomercials – “they slice, they dice, they chop down trees – these teeth will probably save your life.”
It’s all true, though…and then some.
Consider whales – some have teeth as big as a slice of pizza and others have none at all. Instead, those toothless whales have baleen — a hard, fringed material that hangs from each side of the roof of the mouth like vertical blinds. With some baleen more than 13 feet long, it works like an extremely efficient, gigantic sieve to capture tiny crustaceans and fish.
How about teeth that never stop growing? Like other rodents, beavers really need their incisors - specialized teeth at the front of your smile. Without these sharp, strong teeth, they couldn’t gnaw bark to eat, or fell trees to build dams and lodges. So, as with all rodents, their chisel-sharp incisors have evolved to never stop growing.
And, of course, there is the Tasmanian devil. This averaged-size, endangered animal from the Australian island of Tasmania towers about 12 inches tall, yet packs the strongest bite-force for their size of any mammal.