The way in which insects and fish breathe differs in the process in which each receives oxygen. Insects use a tracheal system to receive oxygen and fish use their gills to filter oxygen out of the water.
No, fish do not typically eat ducks. Ducks are not a natural food source for fish, and they inhabit different ecosystems. Fish are more likely to eat smaller aquatic animals such as insects, small fish, or algae.
While scales of fish are made of different materials (bone, cartilage, etc.), fish such as carp have scales that are made out of chitin (a polysaccharide that is both flexible and strong).
The ibis eats both plants and animals. However it prefers to eat fish, reptiles, and crustaceans, as well as different types of insects.
small fish and stuff like that also insects
many small cave lizards and amphibiansalso gold fish they cant hear as well as fresh water fish.Moles and worms
Lungs for land (or air breathing) animals, Gills for fish, pores for insects.
A reptile is cold-breathing a fish is not. A Fish has gills a reptile doesn't That's about all i can tghink of.....
Fishes aree vertebrates while insects are not.
Fish cannot be insects, any more than cars can be telephones. They are quite different. However, there is a little insect called a silver fish (but it's not actually a fish) that eats stuff like paper and clothes.
Different fish species eat different foods. Some are vegetarian and eat algaes and plant life, others eat insects and still others eat smaller fish.
There is 28 plants, 140 fish, and 35 insects.
To determine if your fish is sleeping or dead, observe its breathing and movement. If the fish is still breathing and shows some movement, it is likely sleeping. However, if there is no movement and the fish is not breathing, it may be dead.
archer fish
energy is tranferred from insects to fish in this system by?
There are many different species, to many to name. The main catigories are mammals, reptiles, birds, cartalagouness fish, boney fish, and insects.
Fish breath underwater
First fish, then insects, then humans.