yes
A goldfish is a ray-finned fish because its fins are supported by bony rays. Ray-finned fishes belong to the class Actinopterygii, characterized by fins made of webs of skin supported by bony spines or rays. This differs from lobe-finned fishes like lungfish or coelacanths, which have fins with a fleshy, lobed appearance.
Caudal fin, Dorsal fin, Pectoral fin, Ventral fin, and the fin.
The ones in pairs are: pelvic fins and pectoral fins.
The paired fins (pectoral and pelvic) are the nearest things fish have to limbs.
the fish looses its body balance
Fins have rigid bones that are called spines, although they are not connected to the actual spine. Rays are made of cartilage, not bone. Sometimes fins are called fin rays, but they are not true rays.
The rohu fish typically has one dorsal fin, one caudal fin, two pelvic fins, and two pectoral fins, totaling six fins.
The flaps on a fish are called fins, which help the fish to maintain balance, steer, and move through water. There are different types of fins on a fish, such as dorsal fins, pectoral fins, pelvic fins, anal fins, and caudal fins.
There are two sets of "paired" fins. The ones on each side of the fish behind the gills are the "Pectoral Fins" and the ones in front of the fishes vent on the underside of the fish are the "Ventral Fins". Sometimes these fins are wrongly refered to as "Pelvic Fins".
Yes, the tilapia fish has both fins and scales. Like most bony fish, tilapia possesses paired fins (pectoral and pelvic) as well as unpaired fins (dorsal and anal fins). Additionally, it is covered with scales, which are typical characteristics of many fish species.
A fish has several different types of fins. There are the pectoral fins, located beneath the operculum (gills). There is the pelvic fin, located at the bottom of the fish, below the pectoral fin. There is the anal fin, which i located behind the anus, and there is the dorsal fin as well. It is located on top of the fish.
They are on the Ventral side, but you probably mean the Pelvic fins and possibly anal fin, depending on the fish species These links provided below may help you :)