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A leopard shark has five gill slits on either side of its body. The gill slits are on the sides of the shark's head.
A cookie cutter shark (Isistius brasiliensis) has five pairs of gill slits, which is characteristic of most shark species. These gill slits allow the shark to extract oxygen from water as it swims.
Sharks typically have 5 to 7 pairs of gill slits located on the sides of their bodies. These slits are used for obtaining oxygen from the water to breathe.
The vast majority of the 500+ known species of shark have 5 gill slits, there are 4 species that have 6 gill slits and 2 species that have 7
it has 4 gill slits for extra air to breathe while it has another nose on its nostrils to smell prey from a far away distance
A bull shark has five gill slits on each side of its body, totaling ten gill slits. These gill slits are essential for respiration, allowing the shark to extract oxygen from the water as it swims. Bull sharks, like other shark species, rely on constant water flow over their gills for effective breathing.
i seid shut your fucing pie hole
A great white shark does not have gils. Gills, not gils, are the respiratory organs found in fish that allow them to breathe underwater by extracting oxygen from the water. Great white sharks have five pairs of gill slits on the sides of their heads for this purpose.
Spiny dogfish Squalus acanthias (also known as spurdog, piked dogfish and a number of other names) has five gill slits, all situated in front of the pectoral fins. This is according to Fishes of the Sea by John and Gillian Lythgoe (Blandford Press, 1991). The FAO FishBase (www.fishbase.org) is a good source of information on this and many other species of fish.
1 pair
Yes a lamprey can kill you in many ways
It would be more appropriate to say that all vertebrate embryos develop pharyngeal gill slits during one of the many phases in their embryonic development. This is because while gills are specifically present in fishes, pharyngeal gill slits are a general chordate feature.