Yes, but a narwhal having more than one horn is a rare occurrence. The scientific name for the narwhal is Monodon monoceros. The designation comes from the Greek for 'one tooth one horn'. Indeed, the male narwhal tends to have one horn, and the female none. But there are rare, recorded instances in which a male has two horns and a female one. There also is the one known, recorded instance of a female having two horns.
The value of a narwhal tusk can vary greatly depending on its size, quality, and legality of acquisition. Illegal trading of narwhal tusks is a concern and can fetch high prices on the black market. Officially traded narwhal tusks obtained through regulated hunting can be sold legally for thousands of dollars.
Male narwhals typically have one tusk, which is a long, straight tooth that can grow up to 10 feet in length. In rare cases, some male narwhals may grow two tusks, with the second tusk being much shorter.
Because no narwhals have horns! However, both male and female narwhals have tusks. Males are more likely to have two tusks, but you can't necessarily see a narwhal and judge its gender based on its tusk.
The longest Narwhal tusks can run over ten feet. They range in size from 4 ft 11 in to 10 ft 2 in.
A narwhal is a tooth whale, but has a special feature separating it from any other whale, which is a twisted tusk growing out of the left part of its mouth. Scientists have examined narwhal tusks a lot, and have found that there are special blood vessels in the tusk. They think that they use their tusks to communicate, but there is only a slight chance that they are right. Thus, they haven't found out much about the narwhal's tusk yet.
Most narwhals have just the one 'tusk', and it is actually a tooth. One in 500 males have two tusks, but the skull has a double tusk'.
A narwhal (Monodon monoceros).
Narwhal
Answer #1 by Mediatech Narwhal are mammals, so they do not lay eggs. Answer #2 by Ginezumi Hunters want narwhal body parts if they seek food, and narwhal tusks if they seek profit. The narwhal has a long, curved tusk that projects frontwards out through the mouth. Inuit hunters generally are interested in narwhal body parts as sources of food. Non-Inuit hunters generally aren't interested in narwhal body parts as food. They seek the narwhal's tusk.
The value of a narwhal tusk can vary greatly depending on its size, quality, and legality of acquisition. Illegal trading of narwhal tusks is a concern and can fetch high prices on the black market. Officially traded narwhal tusks obtained through regulated hunting can be sold legally for thousands of dollars.
Male narwhals typically have one tusk, which is a long, straight tooth that can grow up to 10 feet in length. In rare cases, some male narwhals may grow two tusks, with the second tusk being much shorter.
A walrus has ivory tusks. A narwhal has a single ivory tusk.
Because no narwhals have horns! However, both male and female narwhals have tusks. Males are more likely to have two tusks, but you can't necessarily see a narwhal and judge its gender based on its tusk.
The longest Narwhal tusks can run over ten feet. They range in size from 4 ft 11 in to 10 ft 2 in.
Because Inuit hunters kill them for there skin and tusks. Hope this helped
Firstly you don't need to say whale after narwhal, secondly the unusual fact about them is that their horns are infact tusks and are very suseptable to pain.
A narwhal is a tooth whale, but has a special feature separating it from any other whale, which is a twisted tusk growing out of the left part of its mouth. Scientists have examined narwhal tusks a lot, and have found that there are special blood vessels in the tusk. They think that they use their tusks to communicate, but there is only a slight chance that they are right. Thus, they haven't found out much about the narwhal's tusk yet.