Yes. Many fish have a skeleton made out bones like us humans.
Bones
A bony skeleton. Snappers are a member of the taxonomic group Osteichthyes (bony fish), as opposed to cartilaginous fishes (like sharks) or boneless fishes (like hagfish).
Bony fishes.
There are bony fishes and cartilaginous fishes.
many fishes do have
I honestly don't know sorry :(
The taxonomic classification of fish that have hard, bony skeletons is teleosts.
They have cartilage instead of bones for a skeleton. Chondo- means cartilage.
Colin Patterson has written: 'New Cretaceous berycoid fishes from the Lebanon' -- subject(s): Beryciformes, Fishes, Fossil, Fossil Fishes, Paleontology 'Review of ichthyodectiform and other Mesozoic teleost fishes and the theory and practice of classifying fossils' -- subject(s): Classification, Fossil Osteichthyes, Fossils, Ichthyodectiformes, Osteichthyes, Fossil, Paleontology 'The caudal skeleton in Lower Liassic pholidophorid fishes' -- subject(s): Fishes, Fossil, Fossil Fishes, Paleontology, Pholidophoridae 'Molecules and Morphology in Evolution'
The ray-finned fishes are characterized by having fins supported by bony spines or rays. They also have a skeleton made of bone, scales covering their bodies, and a swim bladder for buoyancy control. Ray-finned fishes are the most diverse group of fishes, with over 30,000 species.
Ranjana Mehta has written: 'The comparative morphology of the Osteocranium, the Weberian apparatus, the girdles and the caudal skeleton of Indian cyprinid fishes, with their value in systematics' -- subject(s): Classification, Cyprinidae, Fishes, Morphology
The three major groups of fishes are:Jawless Fishes-have no jaw, but a roundmouth, a tube like body made of cartilage (flexible, like your nose), no scales; have slimy skin. Examples: lamprey and hagfish (google them).Cartilaginous Fishes-skeleton made of cartilage, movable jaws, have scales. Examples: sharks, skates and rays.Bony Fishes-skeleton made of bone, 95% of all fish species, covered by bony scales, have a swim bladder (helps fish keep balance), reproduce by external fertilization called spawning; some species have internal fertilization. Examples: perch, bass, northern pike, salmon, and goldfish.Thanks to SIS for the Life Science notes, taken on Friday, May 21st.-sylvesterrose12