Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Rodents don't gnaw just to trim their teeth—it also feels good, according to a new study
Beavers are famous for nibbling away at trees, and their sometimes-peskier cousins, rats and mice, might chomp on drywall and ...
— Cora Wieneke, Mount Horeb, Wis. A Erin Flynn, conservation education curator at Henry Vilas Zoo in Madison, Wis.: Squirrels, beavers, chipmunks and rabbits all have similarly shaped teeth because ...
Chattering squirrels, charming coypus, and tail-slapping beavers -- along with some other rodents -- have orange-brown front teeth. Researchers have produced high-resolution images of rodent incisors, ...
A Squirrels, beavers, chipmunks and rabbits all have similarly shaped teeth because all of those animals have teeth that continually grow throughout their lives. Just like your fingernails grow ...
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