Fish and reptiles are cold blooded. Tuna is a fish amd therefore cold blooded.
if it wants to be! :):)
Yes all fish are cold-blooded, except for the tuna fish.
Cold-blooded While most fish are cold blooded, not all are. Some fish - like the tuna - are warm blooded.
Almost all fish are cold blooded, however some species of tuna e.g. Pacific Bluefin, have warm blooded features, enabling them to raise their body temperature above that of the surrounding water.
Almost all fish are cold blooded, however some species of tuna e.g. Pacific Bluefin, have warm blooded features, enabling them to raise their body temperature above that of the surrounding water.
A pufferfish is not warm-blooded. All fish are cold blooded.
Most fish are cold blooded, though there is evidence that some sharks may be warm blooded.cold blooded
Every fish is cold blooded exempt the tuna fish so a puffer fish is cold blooded.
An animal is cold blooded if its temperature stays the same as the air around it. Some warm blooded animals hibernate and their body temperature drops. When they wake up, their body temperature rises. Other animals Such as tuna fish have warm internal temperatures but do not maintain a constant internal temperature. Their close relatives are cold blooded. The Jury is out on what to call them.
Generally they are cold blooded. However, some tuna, shark and swordfish have warm blooded features. The Blue Fin Tuna use various techniques to keep their muscles and system warm such as having swimming muscles near the center of their bodies instead of near the surface. They are also able to warm their entire bodies through a heat exchange mechanism called the rete-mirabile, which helps minimize the loss of heat through the gills. Blue Fin Tuna must eat more food than other tuna to help maintain their ability to produce heat.
a trout is a cold blooded creature.
It depends on the fish. Most fish are cold blooded, but a few are not. Several species of tuna, for example, are able to maintain their body temperature within large range but above the temperature of the water around them.Well Actually, bluefin Tuna and some other species are neither warmblooded nor coldblooded. They are species in between, meaning that they selectively warm parts of their body.Also the Tuna does not spend energy to keep warm like warm blooded animals, it just has two specific sets of thin blood vessels that work as heat exchangers. One close to the brain and one close to the tail. The tail heat exchanger warms the blood coming cold from the gills, by passing it next to the warm blood, going from the hot tail swimming muscle to the gills.Almost all fish are cold blooded. However, some species of Tuna are able to maintain a body temperature above the ambient seawater temperature using a special organ called the 'rete mirable'.