The only fish that do belong to the group are sharks, rays and chimaeras. All others do not.
Sharks are a type of cartilaginous fish, that is their skeleton is made of cartilage rather than bone. They belong to the vertebrate subphylum of chondrichthyes.
Endangered. The great white shark is a "mackerel shark", allied to the porbeagle, and long finned and short finned mako sharks. The species is considered "Vulnerable", by the IUCN. Recently, numbers have shown an upswing, as more sharks than expected have been counted in South African, and waters off the coast of North America.
chondrichthyes and osteichthyes are the two classes of gnathostomata where fishes also lies
I believe the correct answer is Gnathostomat fish, with paired upper and lower jaw structures; and Agnath fish, which generally have only a toothy suction cup like upper jaw mouth structure.Taken from:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaw
Sharks belong to the Chondrichthyes class which means that they lack what is called "true bone". Their "skeleton" is made up of cartilage, which is the same as the human ear, so they do not have an actual skeleton.
The only fish that do belong to the group are sharks, rays and chimaeras. All others do not.
Sharks belong to the vertebrate group known as Fish. Specifically, they belong to the vertebrate group known as Chondrichthyes - all sharks and rays - which have skeletons of cartilage rather than bone.
Sharks are a type of cartilaginous fish, that is their skeleton is made of cartilage rather than bone. They belong to the vertebrate subphylum of chondrichthyes.
Sharks are a type of cartilaginous fish, that is their skeleton is made of cartilage rather than bone. They belong to the vertebrate subphylum of chondrichthyes.
Sharks are a type of cartilaginous fish, that is their skeleton is made of cartilage rather than bone. They belong to the vertebrate subphylum of chondrichthyes.
Sharks are a type of cartilaginous fish, that is their skeleton is made of cartilage rather than bone. They belong to the vertebrate subphylum of chondrichthyes.
Sharks belong to cartilaginous fish. (Chondrichthyes)
Chondrichthyes
Class Chondrichthyes
Jellyfish belong to Kingdom: Animalia.The current classification is:Superdomain: BiotaDomain: EukaryotaKingdom: AnimaliaSubkingdom: RadiataInfrakingdom: CoelenterataPhylum: CnidariaSubphylum: MedusozoaKingdom: Animalia
Periosteum is the term that doesn't belong. The surface of the epiphysis, articular cartilage, and hyaline cartilage are all cartilaginous tissue.
Sharks are a group of fish with a skeleton of cartilage instead of bone. There are over 470 species of shark ranging from the dwarf lanternshark (6.7 inches long) to the whale shark (39 feet long). Their phylum is Chordata (having a backbone), and class is Chondrichthyes (cartilage skeleton).