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  2. Fish vs. Fishes–What’s the difference - Grammarly

    www.grammarly.com/blog/commonly-confused-words/fish-fishes

    When to use fish vs. fishes. The most common plural form of fish is indeed fish. However, under certain circumstances, you can use fishes as the plural form of fish. If you, for example, see two trout swimming together, you could say that you’re looking at fish. However, if the two trout were joined by a salmon, you could describe them as ...

  3. Fishes | An Open Access Journal from MDPI

    www.mdpi.com/journal/fishes

    Fishes is an international, peer-reviewed, scientific, open access journal published monthly online by MDPI. It covers fishes and aquatic animals research.

  4. Fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish

    A fish (pl.: fish or fishes) is an aquatic, anamniotic, gill -bearing vertebrate animal with swimming fins and a hard skull, but lacking limbs with digits.

  5. fish, any of approximately 34,000 species of vertebrate animals (phylum Chordata) found in the fresh and salt waters of the world. Living species range from the primitive jawless lampreys and hagfishes through the cartilaginous sharks, skates, and rays to the abundant and diverse bony fishes.

  6. Fish are one of the first vertebrates that came to life on this planet. They hold the basic blueprint for all different types of body structures found on the planet and has evolved into all sorts of unusual species.

  7. Fish Pictures & Facts - National Geographic

    www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/fish

    All fish share two traits: they live in water and they have a backbone—they are vertebrates. Apart from these similarities, however, many of the species in this group differ markedly from one...

  8. Welcome to the world of fishes! FishBase is a global biodiversity information system on finfishes. Its initial goal to provide key facts on population dynamics for 200 major commercial species has now grown to having a wide range of information on all species currently known in the world: taxonomy, biology, trophic ecology, life history, and ...

  9. Fish are aquatic vertebrates. They usually have gills, paired fins, a long body covered with scales, and tend to be cold-blooded. “Fish” is a term used to refer to lampreys, sharks, coelacanths, and ray-finned fishes, but is not a taxonomic group, which is a clade or group containing a common ancestor and all its descendants.

  10. Fish – Definition, Examples, Characteristics - Science Notes and...

    sciencenotes.org/fish-definition-examples-characteristics

    Fish are aquatic vertebrates that typically have gills, fins, and a streamlined body. They inhabit diverse environments, from freshwater rivers and lakes to salty oceans and deep seas. Fish, like all vertebrates, possess a backbone or spinal column. This characteristic places them within the subphylum Vertebrata.

  11. Fish - Classification, Jawless, Cartilaginous & Bony Fishes |...

    www.britannica.com/animal/fish/Annotated-classification

    Fishes are typically divided into three groups: superclass Agnatha (jawless fishes), class Chondrichthyes (cartilaginous fishes), and superclass Osteichthyes (bony fishes). The latter two groups are included within the infraphylum Gnathostomata, a category containing all jawed vertebrates.