homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Piranhas replace their razor-sharp dentures all at once

One of the most feared fish in the world has to replace its dull teeth by simultaneously swaping old teeth from one side of the mouth with news ones.

Tibi Puiu
October 16, 2019 @ 10:10 pm

share Share

Piranhas are known for their razor-sharp teeth and relentless bite (the word piranha literally translates to “tooth fish” in the Brazilian language Tupí). These features are essential so that the fish can tear off flesh from its prey, but this also means that their teeth can wear down easily. A new study found that piranhas replace their teeth regularly — and they do so by replacing all their teeth from one side of the mouth at once.

Credit: Pixabay.

For some time, biologists have suspected that piranhas lose all their teeth from one side of the mouth to replace dulled dentures with new ones. This hypothesis has always been difficult to confirm as no has ever caught a specimen with a missing set of teeth.

To investigate, Adam Summers, a professor of biology and of aquatic and fishery sciences at the University of Washington Friday Harbor Laboratories on San Juan Island, had to think outside the box. His team performed a CT scan on 93 piranha specimens from 40 different species, which revealed the contours and positioning of their teeth.

The researchers also matched teeth development with hereditary information for each species in order to understand their evolutionary relationships with one another.

This analysis revealed that the teeth on each side were interlocked together, forming two strong blocks within the mouth.

“When one tooth wears down, it becomes hard to replace just one,” lead author Matthew Kolmann, a postdoctoral researcher at George Washington University. “Once you link teeth together, if one wears too much, it becomes like a missing link in an assembly line. They all have to work together in a coordinated way.”

A CT-scanned image, left, of the red-bellied piranha (Pygocentrus nattereri) shows a set of lower teeth growing below the existing teeth. On the right, you can see the fish’s replacement teeth on the bottom and top of the jaw. Credit: University of Washington/George Washington University

This interlocked arrangement allows the fish to distribute stress all over their teeth when biting hard.  In a 2012 study in Scientific Reports, researchers found that black (or redeye) piranhas (Serrasalmus rhombeus)—the largest of modern species—bite with a maximum force of 72 pounds. That’s three times their own body weight, which is why the interlocking teeth must be so handy. However, there’s a tradeoff: they have to replace their entire set of teeth all at once.

“With interlocking teeth, the fish go from having one sharp tooth that can crack a nut or cut through flesh to a whole battery of teeth,” said co-author Karly Cohen, a UW biology doctoral student. “Among piranhas and pacus there’s a lot of diversity in how the teeth lock together, and it seems to relate to how the teeth are being used.”

A scanning electron microscopy imaging shows how piranha teeth interlock. Credit: Frances Irish/Moravian College.

Ultimately, the researchers confirmed that piranhas—and their plant-eating cousins, pacus—do in fact lose and regrow all the teeth on one side of their face multiple times throughout their lives.

“I think in a sense we found a solution to a problem that’s obvious, but no one had articulated before,” said Summers in a statement.

“The teeth form a solid battery that is locked together, and they are all lost at once on one side of the face. The new teeth wear the old ones as ‘hats’ until they are ready to erupt. So, piranhas are never toothless even though they are constantly replacing dull teeth with brand new sharp ones.”

While this news might make piranhas sound even more menacing, the idea that piranhas could rip a human to shreds is a myth propagated by Holywood.

share Share

CERN Creates Gold from Lead and There's No Magic, Just Physics

Researchers at CERN have managed to knock enough protons off lead atoms to make gold.

A New AI Tool Can Recreate Your Face Using Nothing But Your DNA

New AI built by Chinese scientists can create 3D faces from DNA with alarming accuracy.

How Some Flowers Evolved the Grossest Stench — and Why Flies Love It

Flowers keep making the same mutation time and time again.

People Living Near Golf Courses Face Double the Risk of Parkinson’s

The strong pesticides sprayed on golf courses leech into the groundwater and scientists suspect this could increase the risk of Parkinson's.

He Let Snakes Bite Him Over 200 Times and Now Scientists Want His Blood for an Universal Antivenom

A universal snakebite treatment may be within reach, thanks to an unlikely human experiment.

These companies want to make hand bags out of T-rex leather. But scientists aren't buying it

A lab-grown leather inspired by dinosaur skin sparks excitement—and scientific skepticism

This car-sized "millipede" was built like a tank — and had the face to go with it

A Carboniferous beast is showing its face.

9 Environmental Stories That Don't Get as Much Coverage as They Should

From whales to soil microbes, our planet’s living systems are fraying in silence.

Scientists Find CBD in a Common Brazilian Shrub That's Not Cannabis

This wild plant grows across South America and contains CBD.

Spruce Trees Are Like Real-Life Ents That Anticipate Solar Eclipse Hours in Advance and Sync Up

Trees sync their bioelectric signals like they're talking to each other.