Catalas
yes
Fish blood contains nuclei in each blood cell and are much larger than human blood.
Not necessarily. Crustaceans such as lobsters have blue blood. But vertebrates such as fish and whales have red blood.
cuttle fish...
The line "Today is gone. Today was fun" is from the book "One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish" by Dr. Seuss. It is part of a poem included in the book.
No. Blood is bright red when it contains oxygen and dark red when there isn't a lot of oxygen. The blue you see in veins is the vein itself.
The color of cuttlefish blood is a blue-green due to the high concentrations of copper that it contains.
Most fish have blood that is very similar to human blood, consisting of red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. However, fish blood also contains nucleated red blood cells, which is a key difference from mammalian blood.
That's easy. When blood is in your body it is blue that's why your veins are blue. When oxygen meets the blood the blood turns red.
Venous blood travels from the body to the heart in veins and it goes to the right atrium.
blue pink, because it has the blood of the fish which it has consumed
Because it is oxygen rich...the blood that returns to the heart has a blue-ish tinge contains little to no oxygen, and that's why it is blue... Hope this helped! :)