Fish Basics
Types of Fish
Fish Anatomy
Sharks
Gills and Breathing
100

True or false: fish are cold-blooded animals.

True

100

Bony fish, cartilaginous fish and these jawless fish are the three main groups of fish.

Jawless fish

100

This fin sits on top of a fish and helps keep it upright in the water.

Dorsal fin

100

This famous prehistoric shark was much larger than any shark alive today.

Megalodon

100

Fish use their gills to take in this gas from the water.

Oxygen

200

These flat, paired body parts are what fish use to swim through the water.

Fins

200

Sharks, skates and rays all belong to this group of fish, which has no true bone.

Cartilaginous fish

200

The fin at the back end of a fish that pushes it forward when it swims.

Tail fin (caudal fin)

200

True or false: sharks can smell a single drop of blood from a long way away in the water.

True

200

Humans breathe with these organs, which fish do not have.

Lungs

300

Most fish have these small, overlapping plates covering their bodies for protection.

Scales

300

Salmon, goldfish and snapper are all examples of this most common group of fish.

Bony fish

300

This line of sensors along the side of a fish detects vibrations and movement in the water.

Lateral line

300

These two flat relatives of sharks have wing-like fins and often lie on the sandy bottom.

Skates and rays

300

Water enters a fish through this body part before flowing over the gills.

Mouth

400

Because fish have a backbone, scientists group them as this type of animal.

Vertebrates

400

Lampreys and hagfish are the two main examples of this strange group with no jaws.

Jawless fish

400

This gas-filled organ helps bony fish control how deep or shallow they sit in the water.

Swim bladder

400

Sharks are famous for having rows and rows of these, which fall out and are replaced throughout their lives.

Teeth

400

This bony flap on the side of a bony fish protects and covers the gills.

Operculum

500

Fish bodies are coated in this slippery substance that helps them slide through the water and protects against disease.

Mucus (slime)

500

This is the scientific class name for bony fish.

Osteichthyes

500

A shark's skeleton is made from this flexible material instead of true bone.

Cartilage

500

Unlike bony fish, sharks have these visible openings on the side of their head instead of a gill cover.

Gill slits

500

Gills look bright red because they are full of these tiny blood vessels that absorb oxygen.

Capillaries