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  1. Hyena Teeth: Everything You Need to Know - A-Z Animals

    Jan 11, 2022 · The spotted or laughing hyenas, the most common and the largest group of hyenas, have 32-34 teeth that include conical premolars, specialized for breaking and crushing bones. Unique from other carnivores , hyenas are distinguished by …

  2. Hyena - Wikipedia

    Although phylogenetically closer to felines and viverrids, hyenas are behaviourally and morphologically similar to canids in several elements due to convergent evolution: both hyenas and canines are non- arboreal, cursorial hunters that catch prey with their teeth rather than claws.

  3. Hyaenodonta - Wikipedia

    Hyaenodonta ("hyena teeth") is an extinct order of hypercarnivorous placental mammals of clade Pan-Carnivora from mirorder Ferae. [6] [7] Hyaenodonts were important mammalian predators that arose during the early Paleocene in Europe [8] and persisted well into the late Miocene. [9]

  4. Hyena Facts, Types, Diet, Reproduction, Classification, Pictures

    Hyenas have a set of strong teeth and jaws, allowing them to break bones easily and kill prey with a single bite. They have sharp claws, which they can retract back into their paws, helping them to tear flesh.

  5. Hyena Facts - Animal Facts Encyclopedia

    Oct 11, 2016 · Unique to hyenas are their amazing bone-crushing teeth. Short, powerful canines are on display towards the front of the jaw, but deep in the back of the jaw where they can exert the most leverage, are massive carnassials which pulverize the entire skeletons of …

  6. 15 Wild Hyena Facts - Fact Animal

    There are 4 species of hyena all from different genus – the striped hyena, the brown hyena, the spotted hyena, and the aardwolf. They can be found in Africa, the Middle East and Asia and live in savannas, grasslands, and woodlands depending on their food source.

  7. Hyaenodontidae - Wikipedia

    Hyaenodontidae ("hyena teeth") is a family of placental mammals in the extinct superfamily Hyaenodontoidea. Hyaenodontids arose during the early Eocene and persisted well into the early Miocene . Fossils of this group have been found in Asia , North America and Europe .

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