energy directly from its food
Beluga Whales use their coddle fins to move about the water. Their fins are like regular fish, but it is just turned 90 degrees.
Whales swim using their fins and tails.
Whales move their fins, or flippers, through the coordinated action of muscles that are attached to their skeletal structure. The flippers are shaped to provide lift and stability in the water, allowing for effective steering and maneuvering. Additionally, the whale's large body and powerful tail (fluke) generate propulsion, while the fins assist in balancing and changing direction. This combination of muscular control and hydrodynamic design enables whales to navigate efficiently in the ocean.
Black people
It swims. It uses its fins to propel it forward and it wiggles side to side to move through the water easily.
The whale should live in saltwater (ocean) because in the ocean is where it get it's food krill, and different whales move to different oceans for the weather.
Seahorses move through the ocean by using their dorsal and pectoral fins. The dorsal fin helps to propel the seahorse by beating up to 70 times per second. The pectoral fins located on the head help seahorse to steer and remain stable in water.
It doesn't need fins to move forwards, but fins are used to control rolling from side to side
fins
ventral fins.
they move there fins and muscles to move in the water!
Fish move by swimming. They move their fins back and forth to swim. Some fishes have a swim bladder which is an organ that help bony fish stay in different depth.