Since fish live underwater, they need scales, otherwise their hair would be wet. By the way, God made all animals differently for a reason.
No. A salmon is a fish so it has scales instead of hair like mammals, not both.
No, bony fish do not have hair. Instead of hair, they have scales covering their bodies, which serve to protect them and reduce drag in the water. Some species may have structures that resemble hair, like sensory filaments, but these are not true hair.
Scales are to fish as hair is to mammals. Both scales and hair serve protective and insulating functions for their respective animals, adapting to their environments. Just as hair can provide warmth and sensory input for mammals, scales help fish with movement and protection in aquatic settings.
A piranha has scales....its a fish
No just skin and hair. Animals like fish, snakes and alligators have scales
No.Although it has been proven that a fish can grow tiny scales that move like hair.
no eye lids they have gills they have scales instead of skin
They have actual skin instead of scales. Whales also have blubber, which fish do not posses. Whales have lungs and a blowhole instead of gills.
No, a fish's scales do not shed as the fish grows larger. Instead, the fish's scales grow in size as the fish grows. The scales provide protection for the fish and do not need to be shed like skin or fur.
No, the scales of a fish do not fall off as they grow. Instead, the fish's scales grow with the fish and new scales are added as needed. Scales are necessary for protection and reducing friction in water.
Fur/hair over Skin and Lungs
yes they have scales most fish have scales.