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  2. Arapaima - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arapaima

    The diet of the arapaima consists of fish, crustaceans, fruits, seeds, insects, and small land animals that walk near the shore. [18] The fish is an air breather, using its labyrinth organ, which is rich in blood vessels and opens into the fish's mouth, [19] an advantage in oxygen-deprived water that is often found in the Amazon River.

  3. Arapaima gigas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arapaima_gigas

    Arapaima gigas, also known simply as Arapaima or pirarucu, or paiche, [3] [4] [5] is a species of arapaima native to the basin of the Amazon River.Once believed to be the sole species in the genus, it is among the largest freshwater fish.

  4. Amphibious fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amphibious_fish

    This suborder of fish also use a labyrinth organ to breathe air. Some species from this group can move on land. Amphibious fish from this family are the climbing perches, African and Southeast Asian fish that are capable of moving from pool to pool over land by using their pectoral fins, caudal peduncle, and gill covers as a means of locomotion.

  5. Arapaima leptosoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arapaima_leptosoma

    It is a member of the arapaimas, a genus of air-breathing fish that contains some of the world's largest freshwater fish. Like other members of the genus Arapaima , this fish can breathe air. It is known only from the confluence of the Solimões and Purus Rivers in Amazonas , Brazil, although due to the lack of obvious geographic barriers, it ...

  6. Airbreathing catfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airbreathing_catfish

    Air-breathing organ of walking catfish. The dorsal fin base is very long and is not preceded by a fin spine. The dorsal fin may or may not be continuous with the caudal fin, which is rounded. Pectoral and pelvic fins are variously absent in some species. Some fish have small eyes and reduced or absent pectoral and pelvic fins for a burrowing ...

  7. Anabas testudineus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anabas_testudineus

    The climbing perch (Anabas testudineus) is a species of amphibious freshwater fish in the family Anabantidae (the climbing gouramis).A labyrinth fish native to Far Eastern Asia, the fish inhabits freshwater systems from Pakistan, India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka in the west, to Southern China in the east, and to Southeast Asia west of the Wallace Line in the south.

  8. Anabantoidei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anabantoidei

    The labyrinth organs, a defining characteristic of fish in the suborder Anabantoidei, is a much-folded suprabranchial accessory breathing organ.It is formed by vascularized expansion of the epibranchial bone of the first gill arch and used for respiration in air.

  9. Anabantiformes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anabantiformes

    The Anabantiformes / æ n ə ˈ b æ n t ɪ f ɔːr m iː z /, is an order of bony fish proposed in 2009. [1] They are collectively known as labyrinth fish, [4] are an order of air-breathing freshwater ray-finned fish with two suborders, five families (Channidae, Aenigmachannidae, Anabantidae, Helostomatidae, and Osphronemidae) and at least 207 species. [5]