The bony fish. They are also known as lobe-finned fishes.
Coelacanths (A great film by Mamoru Oshii!) .
coelacanths
the coelacanths
the coelacanths
Coelacanths
Coelacanths
the coelacanths
Coelacanth coelacanths had become extinct 60 or 70 million years ago
Not really. In 1995, results from a dive counted about 40 coelacanths. The number has changed since then, but coelacanths are still nowhere near abundant. South African fisherman who fish for oilfish sometimes catch a coelacanth by accident. Without the strength to swim hundreds of meters back to their habitat, they usually die. Some of them get sold to scientists. As far as we know, coelacanths are very rare. Prior to around 1940, we thought they were extinct. They are still in danger.
Coelacanths have been found off the coast of southern Africa near Madagascar.
The coelacanths are a primitive form of fish related to lungfishes and tetrapods They have been present in the Earth's oceans since the end of the Cretaceous period. They are presently found in the Comoros, Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, Madagascar, and in iSimangaliso Wetland Park, Kwazulu-Natal in South Africa. With this distribution the number of individual fish is probably in the hthousands.
Yes. It is a relatively uncommon fish off the east coast of Madagascar and most common near the Comoros islands. The native Comorians call the fish gombassa and do not fish for it since it is not very edible.