out to be (see: Do Sharks Really Not Like How Humans Taste?), they do possess a number
of frighteningly efficient mechanisms to assist with aquatic hunting, including ultra-streamlined
bodies, high intelligence, the ability to detect electrical fields and minute changes
in water pressure, great hearing, incredibly sharp vision, amazing sense of smell (Lemon
sharks can even detect tuna oil at a concentration of just one part per 25 million), and the
topic of today- many rows of razor sharp teeth, including the ability to rapidly replace them.
But are sharks actually able to grow an unlimited number of teeth throughout their lives?
Yep.
In fact, while the number varies wildly based on things like type of shark and lifespan,
it’s not out of the question for a single shark to grow as many as 30,000-50,000 teeth
in its lifetime!
This might have you wondering what the process is on how exactly sharks replace missing teeth?
shark teethIn a nutshell, all sharks have multiple series and rows of teeth.
The number varies between type of shark, but most have between 5 and 15 series of teeth
(counted from front to back) in their mouths which themselves contain between 15 and 25
rows of teeth (counted along the jawline).
(As an example of how this can vary, the bull shark possess an unbelievable 50 rows and
7 series of teeth, giving it somewhere in the vicinity of 350 frightening teeth at any
given time.)
These teeth are arranged in such a way that the frontmost series will always house the
largest teeth with the series behind it holding slightly smaller teeth and behind that holding
smaller ones still, and so on until we get back to the rear series which are the most
recently formed.
These front teeth are referred to as the shark’s “working teeth” and are the ones primarily
used for biting, tearing flesh and all of the other things a shark is thinking about
doing when it’s swimming around below your legs as you dangle them in the ocean…
This isn’t to say that the second, third or even the teeth located towards the back
of a shark’s mouth aren’t used when a shark is devouring something like your lower
half, it’s just that the front series of teeth are typically subjected to the most
stress when this occurs.
(Note: In truth, only about a dozen people per year are killed by sharks vs. approximately
20-30 million sharks per year killed by humans according to the Florida Museum of Natural
History’s Department of Ichthyology.
Who’s the apex predator now sharky?)
Given shark teeth are not deeply rooted like human teeth and given the animal’s incredible
biting power, shark lose teeth pretty frequently when eating, usually front ones.
Not only that, but they also naturally shed teeth throughout their lives, with the front
teeth being fully replaced approximately every few weeks.
(This rate varies by type of shark, age, and even the temperature of the water- younger
sharks typically replace teeth faster and, at least in some types of sharks, colder temperatures
help them hang on to their teeth longer.)
This means that the teeth in a shark’s mouth are nearly always in pristine condition and
quite sharp, as they typically never get the chance to be dulled or worn over time before
being shed or broken off.
Whenever a shark loses a tooth, the tooth directly behind it will begin to be pushed
forward into the area left by the old tooth, all the while growing to the size of the tooth
it is replacing.
At the same time, the tooth behind that will do the same thing and so will every other
tooth until the shark once again has a full set of teeth- more or less a “conveyor belt”
of death.
And if you’re wondering whether or not losing teeth via them breaking off when they bite
something hurts sharks, this isn’t clear.
Shark teeth do have a certain amount of flex (in great whites approximately 15 degrees
of flex) which they can sense, using this fact to help “feel” things, not unlike
how a human might touch something to feel its texture.
But as for pain in over-flexing to the point of loss of a tooth, observations of sharks
in the wild and captivity seem to indicate that, if there is any pain involved, it is
only minor discomfort at most.
Given how critical it is for sharks to have a good set of chompers and how easily teeth
are broken off, it will likely not surprise you that this replacement process happens
quite quickly.
As for an exact time-frame, this varies and can be influenced by a number of factors including
the size, species and age of the shark, how recently the tooth replacing their missing
tooth was itself replaced and the shark’s overall health.
But for a ballpark figure, this process can take anywhere from between a single day to
a few weeks.
However, even in the event that replacing the tooth does take weeks, the smaller teeth
are still useful, meaning the loss of even several teeth in the first series is highly
unlikely to negatively impact the shark in question.
So to sum up, as far as experts are aware, there is no upper limit on the amount of teeth
a given shark can produce in a lifetime; as long as it stays healthy, a shark will continue
to grow new teeth until the day it dies.
As a side-effect of all this, the ocean floor is covered in many trillions of shark teeth,
which is one of the reasons we know so much about shark evolution.
You see, as with most teeth, because shark teeth are primarily made of a hard, calcified
tissue known as dentin (for reference elephant tusks are primarily made of dentin as well)
surrounded by an even harder layer of enamel, their teeth don’t typically decompose.
This, combined with how (relatively) quickly their teeth are fossilised by the sediments
on the ocean floor, means we have a massive number of ancient shark teeth to study today.
(And if you’re curious, see How Do Things Become Petrified?)
(As another interesting aside, a shark’s placoid scales are also made up largely of
dentine and don’t grow in size once in place.
So to accommodate this, as their bodies grow, they produce new teeth-like scales to more
or less fill in the gaps.)