Red, just like ours. i'm sorry but you have wrong. Some fishes fave red like ours (hondrichthies and osteychthies) and someone else have blue(mallusca etc)
can you feed a blood parrot fish a feeding fish
Yes, but they have a closed circulatory system (their hearts have only two valves) and gills instead of lungs.
the only fish that see colors live in the northern toptopia where they can see colors humans can see
The bloodsucking fish with no jaw is likely to be a lamprey. Lampreys are jawless fish that use their toothed, funnel-like mouths to attach to other fish and feed on their blood and tissues.
Yes, Arctic fish have antifreeze proteins in their blood that allow them to survive in extremely cold temperatures by lowering the freezing point of their body fluids. These proteins prevent ice crystals from forming and damaging the fish's cells, enabling them to thrive in icy waters.
Yes, platelets are colorless fragments of cells that help in blood clotting. They do not contain a nucleus and are smaller than red and white blood cells.
fibrigin
An insect's blood is typically colorless or pale yellow.
No, flies do not have red blood. They have a colorless blood-like substance called hemolymph.
white blood cells
What about Blood Parrot Fish?
Fruit flies do not have red blood like humans. Their blood, called hemolymph, is colorless.
The blood of insects is typically colorless or pale yellow due to the lack of red blood cells found in vertebrates.
can you feed a blood parrot fish a feeding fish
If you mean why isn't a cockroaches blood red, it is because they do not use hemoglobin to carry the oxygen in their blood. Hemoglobin is what causes blood to be red.
White blood cells (leukocytes) are round and colorless, often accounting for less than 1% of the total blood volume. They play a vital role in the immune response by defending the body against infections and foreign invaders.
Blue