Not exactly. They perform a similar function and are made of basically the same chemicals but because fish live under water, they have to handle different stresses and strains so they are different (lighter) in their proportion, design and construction.
No, the number of bones depends on the species and on the age of the fish. Some fish such as sharks, rays, and agnaths have no bones.
No they have bones inside there body
Yes, all fish have bones. In fact, all fish are vertebrates, so they all have vertebrae (a spine or backbone).
I think kids and adults have the same number of 206 bones, but I do not know what they are all called . . . (=
Regardless of race, the average human adult has 206 bones. However, the number of bones can vary slightly among individuals due to varying bone structures and possible anomalies.
It's a fish. Its body structure is pretty much the same as any other fish. Gills, stomach, bones, all that stuff.
yes all fish have back bones
jelly fish
All animals at different, so it has to be a specific animal. Generally a human has a different skull. If the animal is an invertebrate, the human skeleton would have a spine whereas the invertebrate would not.
no it does not
There are 10 bones in each leg. All ungulates have the same number in each leg. That would be a total of 40 bones.
Yes betta fish do have bones like most other fish.Yes. All beta fish have bones. Unless it was born without them then it would just be a fishy blob.
146
yes, because they are by all accounts a fish--and all fish have scales.