they have a serous disease called you need to listen to your teacher better or have a hearing test OK JERK.
No, fish gills do not move when they are dead. When a fish dies, its gills stop functioning, as they require the fish to be alive in order to extract oxygen from the water through the process of respiration.
Fins are fan-like on some fish, they are used to move the fish in the water.
How many times a fish moves its gills in 1 minute depends on the species of fish and its size. Some species move their gills between 125 and 135 times a minute. Smaller fish move their gills more often than larger ones.
Fish have fins instead of legs. Fins help fish navigate and move through water by providing stability and propulsion.
Fish can swim because they have streamlined bodies that reduce water resistance, paired fins that provide stability and maneuverability, and a swim bladder that helps with buoyancy control. These adaptations allow fish to move efficiently through water.
They move their arms slowly.
a star fish can move 1 mile a month and 2 weeks and 3 days amd 1 hour and 12 minutes and 38 seconds
think its slow...
by moving its points - not very hard was it dum dum!!
The bottom,so they can move
Yes, If another fish was to eat the star fish whilst underwater then the star fish would die.
I only know of Marine Star fish.
star fish are food
what is names of star fish
Not exactly. Starfish can move using hundreds of tiny feet on their undersides, but that isn't really walking.
A star fish is not a fish and it does have the word fish in it but its not a fish. A fish is an aquatic vertebrate with an internal skeleton of bone or cartilage and usually a relatively complex central nervous system. Fish move mostly by swimming through the water. Most fish have bilateral symmetry, meaning they are symmetrical across one line running from front to back, though some fish lack any symmetry. As vertebrates, they are in the phylum chordata. A star fish is an invertebrate in the phylum echinodermata. They do not have any sort of internal skeleton and have a simple nervous system. They move very slowly, crawling across the sea floor on hundreds of tiny feet. Like most echinoderms, starfish are radially symmetrical, with five or more lines of symmetry.
Acanthaster planci