Usually yes. If the fish is dead, then it might not, but an alive fish always does.
Yes, fish experience rigor mortis after death similar to other animals. This phenomenon occurs due to the depletion of ATP in the muscle tissues, causing muscles to stiffen. Rigor mortis in fish can last for a shorter duration compared to land animals due to the lower body temperature of fish.
it is dangerous to other fish because it is poisonion
The National University of Singapore created genetically modified zebra fish that can produce an edible vaccine for Hepatitis B in their muscles.
hey, I can't tell you eaxactly how many muscles they have but I can tell you that a fish's muscle count for 80% of its body... hope that helps.
NO,there is no small fish that makes sound.The smallest fish that makes noise is a dog fish.
Through the gills
They flap their tails and fins and they use their fin and tail muscles! :)
Fish muscles are segmented due to the way they swim....Or they swim due to the way the muscles are segmented.(You'd have to ask nature which came first, the muscles or the swimming)Much like how a worm uses segmented muscles to move side-to-side through earth, fish use a similar mode of transportation. The way they contract and retract their side muscles called "myomeres" results in the way they swim in that side-to-side motion.
answer: muscles,fish,snakes that is all i know!
To swim.
pig fish
muscles doesnt move in blood of fish,they are attached to bones or skin.
answer: muscles,fish,snakes that is all i know!
fish or cod liver oil
most fish move by using muscles and fins to push the water and there bodies through the water
To control general attitude/level in the water, fish have a "swim bladder" in order to move they have muscles and fins.
Crayfish have more joints and more muscles, making them able to have more movement than starfish.