The colecanth lived before the dinosaurs, through the dinosaur age and now every now and then people catch one. That means they are rare but still alive.
Yes......But they're already extinct
In the so-called "Midnight Zone" about 2,00 feet deep.
The six-legged creature hiding in the coelacanth is a type of parasitic copepod known as a "larval isopod." These small crustaceans can infest various marine animals, including the coelacanth, which is a rare and ancient fish. The copepod can live within the coelacanth's gills or body, feeding off its host. This relationship exemplifies the complex interactions found in marine ecosystems.
yes, the coelacanth is older than the dinosaurs.
No, the coelacanth is a carnivorous fish. It feeds on other fish and cephalopods.
The scientific name for the coelacanth is Latimeria chalumnae.
You can catch a coelacanth when it is raining or snowing
The natural lifespan of a coelacanth is about 60 years. Thanks for reading my answer!
To catch a coelacanth, it must be raining or snowing- anything else is not suitable weather for the coelacanth. Just search in the ocean from night to morning, and if the fish is large, it should be a coelacanth.
The living coelacanth, Latimeria spp., can reach a total length of 2 metres.
The river Ganges dolphin, the Coelacanth fish (an ancient fish) and the Gharial crocodile.
The Coelacanth lives in the Indian Ocean, ranging anywhere from South Africa to India, and Indonesia.