they are called flish... they are callled this because they can fly and swim... so they are flish.... no just kidding they are fish
Generally, aquatic animals have fins.
Looks like a fish.
Fish
Fish
fish
No, frogs are not kosher. Only land animals with divided hooves and chews the cud are kosher. Only water animals with fins and scales are kosher.
They swim, they have gills, they live under water, they are sea creatures. They have fins, they travel in schools, they live underwater, and they have scales. Most fishes have gills, fins, and scales. Their skeletons are either made of cartilage and bone. they are cold blooded
Salmon have scales. They have fins. They can breathe in water through gills. Yes, they are fish.
Some of the adaptations that allow fish to live in the water are gills, fins, and scales. The gills allow the fish to live in the water. The gills allow the fish to extract oxygen from the water. The fins allow the fish to swim through the water and help it stear itself. For the scales I'm not sure!
they are arranged by the fins
Fins are used for direction. For example: A shark uses it's fins to descend, ascend, turn, and swim through the water. Scales are important because they act as an animals natural armor. For example: An alligator or crocodile use their scales to protect themselves from an animals hooves, teeth, or horns. -Haley Brown
Fish move by swimming...as do water mammal, amphibians, and many reptiles, land mammals, insects, and birds can also swim.
No, frogs are not kosher. Only land animals with divided hooves and chews the cud are kosher. Only water animals with fins and scales are kosher.
No it does not have scales, and yes, it has fins
Yes, they do have both fins and scales.
Birds don't have fins as fins are for swimming in water. One could argue that they have scales on their feet as the skin there is tough and 'scaly' but there is not an overlapping matrix of scales like their would be in reptiles.
Water animals must have scales and fins to be considered kosher.
No. According to Leviticus 11:9-12... "Of all the creatures living in the water of the seas and the streams, you may eat any that have fins and scales. But all creatures in the seas or streams that do not have fins and scales--whether among all the swarming things or among all the other living creatures in the water--you are to detest. And since you are to detest them, you must not eat their meat and you must detest their carcasses. Anything living in the water that does not have fins and scales is to be detestable to you." Corals are animals without fins and scales (no sessile animal needs either) that live in the ocean, so they are detestable to you.
There are many classes of fish which do not have scales nor fins. The Agnatha has neither fins nor scales; the Condrichthye, including sharkes, rays and skeats have fins but no scales; the Ostichthyes, of which several families have members with the common name, mackerel, with both scales and fins. The King Mackerel, S. cavalla, has very tiny scales and fins.
Yes all tuna have fins and scales
Tilapia fish has fins and scales like any other fish. The tilapis fins and scales are less difficult to remove.
I do not know of any mammal (mammals are the only animals to have hair) that has fins (fins are the preserve of fishes), but a sea-lion is an animal that is covered in hair and has "flippers".