The pharyngeal teeth grind up coral rock that the fish ingests during feeding.
The number of pharyngeal teeth more frequent is 6-5 and rarely 6-6.
Instead, they have convergent structures called pharyngeal teeth in the throat.
The jaws are aided by powerful muscles and many species also have pharyngeal teeth to further process prey items.
Their pharyngeal teeth can also distinguish them from other Arizona chubs.
The pharyngeal teeth are species-specific and are used by specialists to determine species.
Shiners have pharyngeal teeth than line up in single lines inside their mouths, which also make them easily distinguishable.
For this purpose it has specialised pharyngeal teeth.
These clicking sounds are generated when the loach grinds its pharyngeal teeth.
Very small (0.1 mm) structures that are probably pharyngeal teeth are present in the body cavity.