No! Whales are air-breathing mammals that give birth to live young. Whales produce milk for their young, which also designates them as mammals.
No, whales are not classified as fish. They are mammals and belong to the group called cetaceans. Fish and mammals are different in terms of their anatomy, reproduction, and other characteristics.
No, sharks and whales belong to different groups. Sharks are fish and belong to the group Chondrichthyes, while whales are mammals and belong to the group Cetacea. They are both classified under the superclass Osteichthyes, which includes all bony fish, but they diverged into separate evolutionary paths long ago.
The cetacea order is classified into two suborders: Odontoceti (toothed whales) and Mysticeti (baleen whales). Odontoceti includes dolphins, porpoises, and sperm whales, which have teeth for hunting. Mysticeti includes species like humpback and blue whales, which have baleen plates to filter feed.
Fish are classified as aquatic vertebrates that breathe through gills and have fins for swimming. They are further classified into three main groups: jawless fish (like lampreys), cartilaginous fish (like sharks and rays), and bony fish (like salmon and tuna). These groups are then divided into various classes, orders, families, and species based on their characteristics and evolutionary relationships.
Yes, fish are classified under the phylum Chordata because they possess a notochord, a dorsal hollow nerve cord, pharyngeal slits, and a post-anal tail during some stage of their life cycle.
There are about 32 recognized phyla of fish, including bony fish (Osteichthyes), cartilaginous fish (Chondrichthyes), lampreys (Petromyzontida), and hagfish (Myxini).
Some whales are classified as mammals. Smaller fish are not
Whales have tiny hairs on their backs, and mammals have to have hair to be classified as mammals, and fish CAN NOT have hair.
Yes, like dolphins and whales
blue whales are classified as mammals.
well it depends some are mammals e.g. dolphins, whales fish: e.g. trout, gold fish
Whales Are Mammals, Fish Are Not
They are not fish they are mammals and they are whales
a group of fish is called a 'school' of fish and a group of whales are called a 'pod' of whales.
No. Whales are not fish, they are mammals. The largest fish is the Whale Shark.
Rays are classified as fish.
One thing that fish have that whales do not have are gills. Fish need gills to breathe, but whales have a blowhole because they are mammals.
Similarities: * Whales, dolphins and fish are all vertebrates * They all need to live in water and cannot survive out of water for long * They all have a streamlined body shape, with dorsal and pectoral fins Differences: * Whales and dolphins are mammals, but fish are simply classified as "fish" * Fish have scales (even a shark has fine scales); whales and dolphins have smooth skin * Fish breathe through gills; whales and dolphins use lungs and a blowhole, which really functions like a nose, on top of their heads * Most fish lay eggs, while whales and dolphins give birth to live young * Fish are cold blooded; whales and dolphins are warm-blooded * Swimming motions are different: Fish moves through the water by using their body muscles to push their tails side-to-side; whales and dolphins move by pushing their tails up and down