Yes, but it would make catching food and fleeing from danger very difficult.
Yes, but in terms of being able to catch food and flee from danger, they would not survive long without human intervention.
The anal fin is the one just in front of the fishes anus.
The pelvic fin is in the bottom; toward the front side of the middle. The pectoral fin is on the bottom, in the front. The pectoral fin helps control the direction the perch moves. The pelvic fin also controls the direction it moves. The anal fin is in the bottom back side and helps the fish balance. The dorsal fins are on top, one in the middle one it the back and stabalize the fish and aid in sharp turns. The caudal fin, or the tail, is in the back and helps to propel the fish through the water.
On a dolphin and most fish the fin behind the dorsal fin is the tail fin. Some fish, such as knife fish, have no dorsal fin or tail fin. Dolphins of course are mammals, not fish.
Damsel fish are OK in a Marine (sea water) environment. They will not survive in fresh water.
there is many adaptation fish have to survive like they have gills to breath under water and a fin to swom better
The tail fin of a fish (the caudal fin) is a fish's means of propulsion through the water.
the little fin helps the fish to push its self foward the common house fish can not swim like a shark (swaying back and forth with no little fin) it pretty much means that without the little fin the fish will not be able to swim so the whole thing is the fins on a fish do not work alone they work as a team.
The fin on the top/back of all fish is called the "Dorsal Fin."
I call it a sketch of a fish's fin. I am sorry if this does not help, but unless there is a fancy name for it I'm pretty sure its a sketch of a fish's fin. Answer: I call it a sketch of a fish's fin too but on my math hw thing it says u call it a scale drawing. how dumb is that?
No, a dorsal fin from a fish is on its back area.
Most fish typically have 7 fins in total. - The dorsal fin. Prevents fish from rolling. - Adipose Fin. Makes the fish hydrodynamic. - Caudal Fin (tail). Propels the fish through the water. - Pectoral fin (x2). helps the fish steer and halt. - Pelvic fin. Helps the fish steer and halt. - Anal fin. Keeps the fish from rolling.