They are called gills!
Yes :0
Yes :)
Gill slits in sharks and rays help to funnel water into the gills, which empty into the pharynx and eventually the lungs.
5 only two species have more than that six and sevegill sharks have well... 6 and 7 gills
An older name of sharks, which means laterally placed gill-slits.
by the gill slits
gill slits
sharks have to swim at all times. if they stop moving, no oxygen can pass through its gill slits for the shark to breathe.
A leopard shark has five gill slits on either side of its body. The gill slits are on the sides of the shark's head.
"Jaws are believed to have evolved from the first pair of gill arches of agnathans. The second pair of gill arches became support structures for the jaws." - Biology Laboratory Manual, Ninth Edition Darrel S. Vodopich and Randy MooreSo, sharks have fewer gill slits because the first two pairs became the jaw and the structural support for the jaw.
They are fish with no bones, no swim bladder, no scales, and have 5 to 7 open gill slits. These fish include sharks, rays, etc.
Chordates are the organisms that have a rod like cartilagenous structure called notochord which gives rise to nervous system. These have pharyngeal gill slits. Nonchordates are the organisms that do not have a notochord. These do not have pharyngeal gill slits.
Pharyngeal slits are not gill slits. They are filter-feeding organs in non-vertebrates, and are used to strain matter and food from water.
gill slits