Proubaly as large but not as thick as a polar bear
Although details of the size are not widely known, the largest coelacanth was captured by William Sommers off the coast of Madagascar in 2004.
About 6.5 feet and 180 lbs.
You can catch a coelacanth in the ocean when it is snowing or raining, and is a very big fish.
It's big enough to inflict a good bite on a human, but the very fact that we thought they were extinct indicates how rarely we bump into each other. As compared to a shark or a jellyfish, no, a coelacanth is not dangerous.
yes, the coelacanth is older than the dinosaurs.
You can catch a coelacanth when it is raining or snowing
The scientific name for the coelacanth is Latimeria chalumnae.
The living coelacanth, Latimeria spp., can reach a total length of 2 metres.
The Coelacanth lives in the Indian Ocean, ranging anywhere from South Africa to India, and Indonesia.
Ovovivipary
Ii is about 154.5 million dollars for this rare species known as the coelacanth
I think you mean a coelacanth. A coelacanth is a type of fish once thought to be prehistoric. However it is still living today. This is a rather large fish with many fins. You can look up pictures of the coelacanth on google images.
Mahna Mahna
yes it does